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4,000-year-old archaeological site dubbed ‘Stonehenge of the Netherlands’ unearthed

An extensive excavation of an archaeological site in the central Netherlands has revealed burial mounds and religious shrine similar to England's Stonehenge.

A 4,000-year-old archaeological site that contains burial mounds and a shrine dedicated to the sun and the solstice has been unearthed in the central part of the Netherlands. 

The site find has been dubbed the "Stonehenge of the Netherlands" because both prehistoric monuments were believed to have been religious burial sites connected to the solar calendar. 

The sanctuary was "dedicated to the sun," the municipality of Tiel, which is about an hour's drive south of Amsterdam and is where the excavation took place, said on its website on Wednesday. 

"The shrine must have been an important place," the municipality revealed in an English translation. "People kept special days of the year, performed rituals and buried their dead. The shrine had been in use for 800 years."

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The sanctuary was four soccer fields long in total and contains three burial mounds with the largest one being about 65 feet in diameter, which served as a "kind of solar calendar." 

There was a shallow ditch around the largest hill that had several passages, which allowed the sun to shine through on certain days of the year, the municipality explained, adding that the most important days of the year would have been the summer and winter solstices, June 21 and Dec. 21. 

"In the places where the sun shone straight through the openings, archaeologists also found sacrifices," the municipality said, including animal skeletons and human skulls and valuables like a bronze spearhead.

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Archaeologists also uncovered the oldest glass bead ever found in the Netherlands that appears to have come from Mesopotamia, modern day Iraq, thousands of miles away. 

The site from the early Bronze Age is one of the largest ever uncovered in the Netherlands and is a unique find in the country, the municipality said. 

It was discovered in November 2016 during construction at an industrial site called the Medel business park and continued until September 2017. 

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"This sanctuary must have been a highly significant place where people kept track of special days in the year, performed rituals and buried their dead. Rows of poles stood along pathways used for processions," the municipality added in a statement, according to Reuters. 

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Archaeologists excavated more than one million objects from the site, many of which are expected to go on display. 

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