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Stonehenge may be the most famous prehistoric monument, but it’s by no means the only one. In 2003, photographer Barbara Yoshida was on a trip to Scotland when she photographed the Ring of Brodgar, a circle of standing stones in the Orkney Islands. She spent the next 10 years photographing lesser-known and rarely photographed megalithic stones in more than 15 countries and on three continents. Her photographs will soon be published in the book, Moon Viewing: Megaliths by Moonlight. “I’m drawn to places that are spiritual and have a depth of mystery, that have a sense of timelessness and history. These stones were obviously set up for ritualistic purposes, and people have continued to interact with them over thousands of years and invested them with meaning and resonance,” Yoshida said. “They have enormous power and a presence that you can feel when you're among them. We may not know much about the cultures that erected them, but this mystery is what draws me to them. I wanted to record my subjective perceptions and capture some of that mystery.”
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The Gurranes, Castletownshend, Ireland, 2005.
http://www.slate.com/content/dam/slate/blogs/behold/2014/06/Stones/Yoshida_S'Ortali%20'e%20su%20Monte72.jpg.CROP.orig inal-original.jpg
S’Ortali ’e su Monte, Tortolì, Sardinia, Italy, 2013.
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http://www.slate.com/blogs/behold/20...megaliths.html



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