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Buinen: Latest Posts

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D28 Buinen (Hunebed) — Images (click to view fullsize)

<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by Nucleus<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by Nucleus<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by Nucleus Nucleus Posted by Nucleus
4th August 2018ce

D29 Buinen (Hunebed) — Images

<b>D29 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton<b>D29 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton<b>D29 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton LesHamilton Posted by LesHamilton
3rd February 2017ce

D29 Buinen (Hunebed) — Fieldnotes

Visited: May 3, 2011

Hunebed D29 Buinen stands just 37 metres south of its twin, D28, in the same wooded area. Measuring 7.5 × 3.1 metres, this passage grave consists of a full set of eight sidestones and two endstones and still possesses two of its original three capstones and a two stone entrance portal.

Interestingly, these capstones (one of which has slipped into the interior of the grave) are exceptionally flat, and some archaeologists consider that they were once part of the same erratic boulder. If this is the case, then the hunebed builders must have possessed advanced fission techniques in order to be able to cleave the boulder in two. How is unknown, but one suggestion is that the boulder could have been repeatedly heated by fire then cooled with water until it cracked in two; another is that wedges could have been driven into existing cracks. It is a fact that many of the hunebedden throughout Drenthe are built from stones with almost perfectly flat sides.
LesHamilton Posted by LesHamilton
3rd February 2017ce

D28 Buinen (Hunebed) — Images

<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton<b>D28 Buinen</b>Posted by LesHamilton LesHamilton Posted by LesHamilton
2nd February 2017ce
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