A stone lying on a hill
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Coffin stone is a stone lying on a hill.
Introduction :
- The Coffin Stone, also known as the Coffin and the Table Stone, is a large sarsen stone located at the foot of Blue Bell Hill near Aylesford in the English county of Kent's south-eastern corner.
- The stone, which is now lying horizontally, was most likely upright nearby. Various archaeologists contend that the stone was part of a now-destroyed chambered long barrow built during Britain's Early Neolithic period in the fourth millennium BCE.
- If a chambered long barrow existed on the site previously, it would have been constructed by pastoralist communities shortly after the introduction of agriculture to Britain from continental Europe.
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Answer:
A coffin stone is a stone lying on a hill.
Explanation:
- The Coffin Stone, often referred to as the Coffin and the Table Stone is a substantial sarsen stone situated at the base of Blue Bell Hill close to Aylesford in the southeast of the English county of Kent.
- It's probable that the stone, which is currently resting horizontally, was upright close by.
- The stone, according to several archaeologists, was a component of a now-destroyed chambered long barrow constructed in Britain during the Early Neolithic period in the fourth millennium BCE.
- If a chambered long barrow formerly stood there, it was probably built by pastoralist groups soon after agriculture was brought to Britain from continental Europe.
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