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OverviewAcross every continent, ancient societies raised massive stone monuments-precisely aligned, carefully proportioned, and built to endure for millennia. These structures have long been described as ritual symbols or expressions of belief, yet their consistent orientation to celestial cycles and their disciplined architectural design tell a deeper story. Megalithic Science explores a compelling and evidence-based perspective: that many of the world's great stone monuments were not only symbolic, but functional-designed through systematic observation of the sky and an advanced understanding of space, time, and geometry long before the invention of writing. This book examines how prehistoric builders used stone architecture as a scientific medium-encoding astronomical knowledge, calendrical systems, and spatial measurement directly into the landscape. Drawing on archaeology, archaeoastronomy, and architectural analysis, it reveals how ancient cultures tracked solar and lunar cycles, established precise orientations, and preserved knowledge through monumentality rather than text. Written for readers interested in ancient science, early architecture, and the true intellectual capabilities of prehistoric societies, Megalithic Science offers a rigorous, grounded reappraisal of humanity's earliest monumental achievements-and the forgotten scientific traditions that shaped them. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alistair RavenhurstPublisher: Ancient Civilization Imprint: Ancient Civilization Volume: 2 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.558kg ISBN: 9798233980763Pages: 418 Publication Date: 20 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationAlistair Ravenhurst is an independent author and researcher whose work sits at the intersection of comparative mythology, ancient history, and archaeological interpretation. Trained in the close reading of mythic texts and historical traditions-and informed by archaeological method, site formation theory, and paleoenvironmental research-he investigates how human societies encode upheaval, migration, and cultural rupture into enduring narrative forms. His writing is characterized by a disciplined, evidence-minded approach: distinguishing between primary sources, scholarly consensus, and responsible inference while tracing the long-term continuity of motifs that appear across widely separated civilizations. Ravenhurst's research interests include catastrophe memory and oral tradition, coastal settlement and submerged landscapes, early monumentality and calendrical systems, and the ways political authority is shaped by sacred time and ancestral origins. Drawing on scholarship in Quaternary climate history, geoarchaeology, and myth studies, he examines how environmental shocks can fragment material evidence while preserving cultural remembrance through story, ritual, and symbol. He writes for readers seeking academically grounded exploration with narrative momentum-books that treat the ancient past as a field of inquiry where the most enduring questions are not merely what happened, but how humanity remembered it, transmitted it, and rebuilt after it. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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