스톤헨지 4000년 역사의 미스터리 속으로……

조회수 538 2008-10-22 18:40:32

NBC TODAY SHOW Headline

 

Good morning. TODAY exclusive. An interview with Senator Barack Obama as the campaign heats up. His reaction to picking up General Colin Powell’s endorsement 지지. Sara Palin’s readiness to be president. And whether he fears his lead in the polls could vanish 사라지다. Good news in a bad economy. Gas falls below an average $3 a gallon nationwide. But will those prices last?

 

And a star is born. Sara Palin’s first appearance on Saturday Night Live brings in the most viewers in more than a decade. And the Folks at SNL must be wishing this campaign could go on ever today, Monday, October 20, 2008. From NBC News, this is TODAY with Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira, live from studio 1A in Rockefeller Plaza.

 

스톤헨지 4000 역사의 미스터리 속으로……

Even after 4,000 years, the mystery swirls 소용돌이치다 around Stonehenge 영국 Wiltshire Salisbury 평원 거대 돌기둥;석기 시대 후기 유적. Was it a temple, an observatory 관측소, something else? Archeologists 고고학자 have dug all around the massive stones. Mike Parker Pearson decided to dig 파다 beyond. “What we’re looking at here is the foundations and the floor.”

 

After 8 years work, he says, Stonehenge was only one part of a great religious complex. There was a town nearby with buildings for more than 1000 people. And a few miles away from Stonehenge, there was another circle, a virtual twin made of wood. “It actually looks far more like Stonehenge in wood than we’d ever appreciate 감지하다 it.”

 

Why would there be two so close? Parker Pearson suggests that perhaps the wooden circle was a celebration of life while Stonehenge signified ~ 나타내다 death. He’s found evidence that there were cremations there for 500 years. “Wood is something that doesn’t last forever. Just as our own lives won’t last forever. But stone, that’s gonna be there for eternity.”

 

There’s debate, naturally, some scientists think this could’ve been a place for healing. But Parker Pearson says his evidence is strong and Stonehenge is slowly yielding 내주다 its secrets. Ned Potter, ABC News, New York.

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