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Archeologists find Stonehenge-like circle in Denmark

# Danish archeologists have uncovered a four-thousand-year-old circle of wooden piles that they say could be linked to Britain’s world-renowned Stonehenge. The 45 neolithic-era wooden pieces, in a circle with a diameter of about 30 metres, were found during work on a housing estate in the northwestern town of Aars. The two circles of stones at Stonehenge in southern England are believed to have been erected between 3100 BC and 1600 BC. The Danish archeologists are now trying to find if there is an inner circle at the Aars site.