“Spanish Stonehenge” emerges from watery grave for second time in last 3 years

Enlarge / The Dolmen of Guadalperal completely visible in July 2019 due to a low water level in the Valdecañas reservoir.Pleonr /CC BY-SA 4.0

Last week we told you about the flurry of recent coverage resurfacing 2018 news stories about the re-emergence of so-called “hunger stones” due to extreme drought conditions in Europe. We also noted that Europe is once again in the midst of a historically severe drought. Now an ancient site known as the “Spanish Stonehenge”—submerged underwater by a reservoir for decades—has been fully exposed for the second time since 2019 due to low water levels in the reservoir.

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