Our ancestors built many amazing cities and temples and carved so much fascinating artwork, but often the methods and reasons behind what they did have been lost to the mists of time. These pictures reveal the breathtaking work of the ancient world and also show that thousands of years on, there remain more questions than answers...
Read on to discover age-old mysteries we don't know the truth about...
Are these megaliths the petrified remains of a Roman legion turned to stone by the wizard Merlin? So local legend would have us believe, but the truth could be just as fascinating. Near the village of Carnac in Brittany, northern France, a vast area of 100 acres holds around 3,000 standing stones marching into the distance as far as the eye can see. Some stones are placed in regimented lines, others in circles and some on top of one other to form tombs.
So why did these early people go to so much trouble? Historians and scientists have long puzzled over the purpose of these stones. One researcher claims they were an earthquake detection device, while others say they are temples to honour the ancestors, or some kind of calendar or astrological device. Of course, their use could have changed over the thousand years they were arranged, so perhaps we will never know for sure. What is certain is that they are an awe-inspiring sight.
In 1860, French explorer Henri Mouhot was hacking his way through the Cambodian jungle when he suddenly came upon a magnificent temple hidden among the trees. Only a few Buddhist priests and farmers lived there and they knew nothing of its history. Over the years, historians have pieced together the story of a great empire which dominated the area from around AD 800 to 1400. So why was Angkor Wat, located near modern Siem Reap, left to decline in the 15th century?
We know the temple was only a small part of a giant city, and it was populated by Hindu native people, the Khmer. The main temple was linked by cloisters and stairways, and decorated with images of battles and legends written in Sanskrit. These legends tell of mighty kings, revered as gods, who built these enormous structures. Satellite imagery also shows that the rest of the city, now under the jungle, contained hundreds of simpler houses, rice fields and interconnecting canals.
The city's demise was swift. In the 15th century, battles with the Vietnamese and Thai people proved devastating for the Khmer. But other factors may have come into play too. Did a switch from Hinduism to Buddhism mean the Khmer stopped believing the king was a god, thus causing a lack of unity? Did they cut down too much jungle and cause the rice fields to silt up and so diminish their food resource? We don't know but by 1450, Angkor Wat had almost become a ghost town.
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The great pyramids are 4,500 years old while Stonehenge is 500 years older. Impressive – but imagine a city that is 7,000 years older than that! Gobekli Tepe, in modern-day Turkey, was built 12,000 years ago, around the end of the last Ice Age. This fact breaks all the rules that humans had to be settled farmers in order to create cities. Gobekli Tepe was built so early in human endeavour that it has led some to speculate that this could even be the site of the Garden of Eden.
This amazing site was built before the use of the wheel, cloth, metal tools, fire, pottery and domesticated animals. So could it be the Garden of Eden, as mentioned in the Book of Genesis? The Bible makes no mention of built structures in the Garden and it claims Adam and Eve were banished and not allowed to return so could not have built anything later. Nevertheless, the extreme age of Gobekli Tepe must make it the oldest human site yet discovered.
The outside view shows the lower part of the pyramid was constructed in the usual style but something happened to make the builders abruptly change the angle of the slope. Perhaps the sudden death of the person the tomb was built for meant the builders had to finish quickly. Or the collapse of another pyramid being built at the same time made the builders aware of a flaw in the design. Or was this just a prototype, a way of learning valuable lessons on the way to the later pyramid masterpieces?
The stones may be markers of territory or they might be tombstones, with the symbols representing married couples or clans. The stones might even be political statements. Maybe the symbols were some kind of writing that we cannot interpret. Perhaps we will never know their meaning, nor the lives behind their mysterious creators. However, Pictish stones have recently been uncovered in Perthshire that feature a distinct alphabet used mostly by Irish Christians of the time, suggesting a growing Irish Christian influence on Pictish culture.
How were these jars, some weighing 30 tonnes, transported from their quarry about five miles (8km) away? Were they carved out at the quarry then rolled to their resting place? This area is still being excavated, but it seems there are many more places which hold these jars – possibly up to 90 sites. We know nothing of the people who created them, yet it was a feat of great organisation, technical skill and immense hard work. The jars remain today a strange and wonderful sight.
Just 30 miles (48km) north of Mexico City lies an abandoned ruined city covering eight square miles (20sq km). Its pyramids and palaces, roads and irrigation systems lie deserted as they did in the 12th century AD, when the Aztecs came upon the place. The Aztecs named it Teotihuacan or ‘the place where one becomes a god’, but we do not know what the people who built the city called it, since they left no written record. They abandoned the place around AD 700 and took their secrets with them.
But if you'd visited Teotihuacan around the year AD 600, you would have found a thriving metropolis of around 200,000 people. The Pyramid of the Sun, the third largest in the world, would have glowed bright red under the sun, and you could have walked the mile-long Avenue of the Dead flanked by temples and palaces. You would also have seen people using sophisticated irrigation systems necessary to feed such a large population.
Just 100 years later, Teotihuacan was deserted. What happened to this amazing civilisation? It’s possible that soil erosion meant that people were no longer able to feed themselves and this could have caused civil war. Perhaps they were attacked by outside tribes. We do know a fire swept through the city and the people left. Although investigations at the Pyramid of the Moon continue, we may never know the name of the city or its people, but what they left behind is spectacular.
The Chinese government has decided it's wise to leave the tomb unopened until they know more about it. The ancient Chinese thought mercury bestowed eternal life and Emperor Qin reportedly drank it every day – probably the cause of his death. If the ground is contaminated with mercury it would be dangerous to enter, not to mention the risk of booby-trapped crossbows. It looks like a case for Indiana Jones, perhaps?
Check out new secrets of the world's ancient wonders revealed
Newgrange is located in County Meath and consists of a large circular mound 279 feet (85m) in diameter and around 42 feet (13m) high with a 62-foot (19m) stone passageway and chambers inside. The mound is ringed by 97 large kerbstones, some beautifully decorated. It’s now also thought that the structure was not just a tomb, but more like a cathedral – a place for worship and religious ceremonies. The bones of the community’s elite were buried here, illuminated every winter solstice by a beautiful beam of light.
By the 18th century, the population of Easter Island was reduced to 600 and the people had turned on the statues and even started to topple them. Could deforestation have led to civil war, starvation and anger against the old gods? Perhaps without trees, the islanders had to spend time providing habitats for the birds they revered, which left no time for building. Whatever the reason, the stupendous monuments remain a wonder.
Take a look at these incredible ancient wonders rebuilt before your eyes
The Great Pyramid of Giza has been so carefully studied that one might think there are no secrets left to be discovered. However, new techniques have enabled scientists to penetrate within the pyramid’s structure in areas which have no outside access. Subatomic particles called muons move more easily through empty space than through solid structures – so by bombarding the ancient pyramids with these particles and tracking them, experts can get a better picture of what lies within. What they've found is amazing.
One suggestion is that it was an internal ramp used to move the massive blocks of stone to the top of the pyramid. The idea that it might be a hidden tomb containing artefacts is improbable, but we are not likely to know any time soon as the Egyptian authorities will probably never give permission for drilling to access the Great Void. In the meantime, we'll just have to use our imaginations.
Researchers have discovered an unusual falcon shrine in the ancient Egyptian seaport of Berenike, on the western shore of the Red Sea. The finds, which were described as completely unprecedented, included spears, cube-shaped statues and a stela (slab) bearing inscriptions related to falcon worship, with one reading "it is improper to boil a head in here". Pictured here is the area of ancient Berenike.
The tomb dates back to the late Roman period (4th to 6th centuries AD) when the city was partially occupied and controlled by a nomadic group called the Blemmyes. Described as a small, traditional Egyptian crypt, it seems the Blemmyes adapted the falcon tomb to match their own belief system; it's speculated that they may have worshiped the falcon-headed ancient Egyptian god, Khonsu. Pictured here is the Temple of Khonsu in Luxor, Egypt.
Most bizarrely, 15 beheaded falcons were found inside, marking the first time falcons were discovered buried inside a temple and accompanied by eggs. While individual mummified headless falcons are more common, experts are still trying to understand the Berenike site and the Blemmyes.
Japanese researchers and Peruvian archaeologists recently discovered over one hundred new geoglyphs in Peru's Nazca plain, famous for its age-old earth etchings. After two years of field surveys using aerial photos and drones, 168 designs were reported in December 2022 and it's hoped they could bring new information to light about these mysterious, ancient artworks.
The geoglyphs were carved into the terrain some 2,000 years ago and depict humans, cats, snakes, native alpacas and more. The new finds average between 6.6-19.7 feet (2-6m) in length, making them smaller than the previously-found Nazca Lines. Also unlike the other Nazca Lines, which can only be seen from the air, the new finds can be viewed from ground level. Pictured here is a Nazca depiction of a bird.
Experts believe the Nazca culture (approximately 100 BC-AD 700) created these huge designs, but weren't discovered by modern archaeologists until the 1920s. In 2004, 190 more figures were identified. The Nazca Lines cover a vast terrain of almost 190 square miles (500sq km), which not only complicates solving the mystery of why they were created, but also preserving the UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Vrable-Ve'lke Lehemby in Slovakia is one of Central Europe's largest Early Neolithic settlements, covering three separate villages that thrived between 5,250 BC and 4,950 BC. Over 300 houses, plus plots of agricultural land and village boundary markers, have been unearthed at the site. But in summer 2022, archaeologists made a more grisly discovery: 38 skeletons, all decapitated – save for one infant. The mass grave, which is believed to be approximately 7,000 years old, is full of mysteries.
The fact all but one of the skeletons were missing heads makes solving the mysteries very difficult. "Identification of an individual is usually based on the skull, so this year's find represents a particularly challenging excavation situation,” says Dr. Martin Furholt in 2022, one of the archaeologists leading the excavation. Plus, the bodies look as if they were rolled or thrown into the pit, suggesting they were not buried with care. Why (and how) did these people die? Were their heads removed before or after death? And why was only the infant not decapitated?
The discovery of headless skeletons in Neolithic settlements is a growing trend, with similar finds being unearthed in recent years. The excavation's project leader, Dr. Maria Wunderlich, says a brutal massacre isn't the only way to explain how these people died. Perhaps war swept through the village, maybe this was a funerary ritual, or the village may even have been part of a death cult. These are questions we're unlikely to have the answer for any time soon, but if you are curious, you'll be able to examine the skeletons at the University of Kiel's digital archaeology exhibition in the near future.
The mysteries surrounding Skara Brae, the best-preserved Neolithic settlement in western Europe, continue to this day. Said to be at least 5,000 years old – that's even older than Stonehenge and the pyramids – the village, on the Orkney island of Stromness, was left uninhabited and untouched until 1850, when a brutal storm exposed the site. Four structures and a hoard of relics were discovered, but the site remained untouched again until another storm in the mid-1920s hit the area.
Between 1927 and 1930, more excavations took place, but it wasn't until the 1970s when experts realised Skara Brae was even older than first thought thanks to radiocarbon dating. New evidence showed it was constructed around 3180 BC. Archaeologists noticed a recurring pattern on the mound: the houses were all connected by covered passages. However, House Seven (pictured) is detached from the rest, and has a stone-built grave with two female bodies inside. It's also sealed off from the public, prompting further mystery.
The village was abandoned by its residents in around 2500 BC, but why they left remains a mystery. High-status items such as jewellery were left behind, suggesting the villagers fled some kind of disaster or danger. Other theories are that a sandstorm could have engulfed the houses, or that the community simply moved away from the location, causing the sand dunes to reclaim Skara Brae.