In the Czech Republic, archeologists discovered a 7,000-year-old circular structure from the Neolithic period that is believed to have been constructed between 4,900 BCE and 4,600 BCE. This is 1,000 years before the construction of Stonehenge and several thousand years earlier than the Pyramids of Giza. Measuring 180 feet in diameter, the structure—called a roundel—may have been built by people from the Stroked Pottery culture who lived in farming villages in Central Europe. One theory is that “it could have been used as an economic center, a center of trade. Image courtesy of Institute of Archeology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Source: The Guardian September 27, 2022 15:43 UTC