 The continuous discovery of the megalithic monument of Stonehenge is rife and continues to surpass our expectation of what it was. The features recovered through the ages from the fields surrounding Stonehenge have constantly astounded researchers. The latest discovery is no exception. In fact, Dr. Nick Snashall, the National Trust Archaeologist for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site hailing the latest find at the Stonehenge monument as an astonishing discovery. Wait, do you hear this? As the 2020 summer solstice passed into history, the World Heritage Site that is Stonehenge was grappling headlines across the world late on solstice night as archaeologists revealed to the world the latest find experts from the University of St. Andrews were joined by counterparts from institutes including Birmingham, Warwick, the University of Wales Trinity St. David, and the Scottish University's Environmental Research Center at the University of Glasgow to reveal a circular neolithic monument which they have discovered in the vicinity of the Stonehenge monument, leading to speculation about the representations taking place. Researchers have found evidence of 20 or more massive prehistoric shafts, more than 10 meters in diameter and 5 meters deep, forming a circle more than 1.3 miles in diameter. Coring of the shafts, which are more than 10 meters wide and 5 deep, suggest the features were excavated more than 4500 years ago, around the time the settlement of Durrington Walls was built. It is thought the shafts, which form a circle more than 1.3 miles wide around the ancient settlement, served as a boundary to a sacred area or precinct associated with the hinge. Yet again, the use of a multidisciplinary effort with remote sensing and careful sampling is giving us an insight to the past that shows an even more complex society than we could have ever imagined. A new chapter in the Stonehenge story has been uncovered with the latest discovery which no doubt sophisticated practices here are demonstrating that the people were so in tune with natural events to an extent that we can barely even conceive of such disciplines in the today and now. Tim Conard of the University of St. Andrews says that the sedimentary infills contain a rich and fascinating archive of previously unknown environmental information. With optically stimulated luminescence, profiling and dating, we can write detailed narratives of the Stonehenge landscape for the last 4000 years. The remarkable discovery was released as Stonehenge sees its first summer solstice with no-mass visitors. Instead, a whopping 4 million people across the globe tuned into a live stream of the annual event, though there were a few who defied the travel ban to see the solstice in its glory at the hinge. At a site that not only passes expectations of what it is, what it may be representing, who built it and when, but at this place in England, the judgment of human intelligence, our understanding of the ancient things, and therefore an understanding of who human beings are in general, and how we came into being is scratching at the eyelids of intelligence as an apparently sophisticated society developed these things in a period of time that has forced us to scour the depths of hidden knowledge as we search for the answers as to who we are. That is all for the moment guys, we just wanted to share this breaking piece of Stonehenge news to you for your viewing pleasure. Please remember to leave a thumbs up if you enjoyed the video here on the Law History Channel, comments below, and as always, thank you for watching.