Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Snow covered Lanyon Quoit in west Cornwall with a blue sky.
Large granite boulders stacked together in a natural formation on a grassy hillside under a partly cloudy sky.
Treffigan burial chamber is a Neolithic or early bronze age entrance grave burial chambers like this are found on the penwith peninsula west cornwall and the isles of Scilly
A Viking burial site, Mon, Denmark
Pentre Ifan Burial Chamber, one of the finest hilltop megaliths in Wales, with a gigantic 15 tonne capstone, Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.
Kilclooney Dolmen is a Neolithic portal tomb located in County Donegal, Ireland. It is one of the finest examples of a portal tomb in Ireland and is estimated to be around 4000 to 4500 years old. The dolmen consists of a large capstone supported by three upright stones, creating a chamber that would have been used for burial purposes.
Near Morvah Cornwall. Lanyon Quoit. A Dolmen re erected 1824 after storm destruction in 1815. making it look different from the original. Dates back to Neolithic period. 3500 to 2500 BC
The Devil's Den Neolithic Monument, near the World Heritage Site of Avebury in Wiltshire, UK
Tregeseal Stone Circle. One of many bronze age structures found in Cornwall.
Lanyon Quoit Prehistoric Stones in Cornwall in the United Kingdom. The stones of this ancient grave site were originally at the centre of a huge burial mound 90ft x 40ft. They were erected in circa 2500BC.
Two big boulders by the roadside in the English lake District not far from Ambleside, United Kingdom.
Megalithic monument or dolmen in the South-West of England.  The engine-house of a Cornish tin mine can be seen on the horizon.
Grimspound, Dartmoor, Devon
Dolmen of Botlann - megalithic monument in Erdeven village, Brittany, France
Poulnabrone Dolmen Ireland
Lanyon Quoit on Penwith Moor, Cornwall England UK
Kerzérho is a set of neolithic alignments in the commune of Erdeven, in the region of Morbihan Brittany, France. It lies approximately 8 km northwest of Carnac.
Helman Tor in mid Cornwall England UK Geology site ancient monument and large nature reserve
Poulnabrone dolmen (Poll na Brón in Irish is an unusually large dolmen or portal tomb located in the Burren, County Clare, Ireland. Situated on one of the most desolate and highest points of the region, it comprises three standing portal stones supporting a heavy horizontal capstone, and dates to the Neolithic period, probably between 4200 BC and 2900 BC. It is the best known and most widely photographed of the approximately 172 dolmens in Ireland. \nThe karst setting has been formed from limestone laid down around 350 million years ago. The dolmen was built by Neolithic farmers, who chose the location either for ritual, as a territorial marker, or as a collective burial site. What remains today is only the \
Large boulder on grassy hillside overlooking the sea with cloudy sky
Ancient portal dolmen, megalithic tomb, The Burren, Country Clare, Republic of Ireland.
A stone circle on the summer solstice
The Gallery grave of Mougau-Bihan is a megalithic complex made up of 24 large blocks of stone. It is located in the commune of Commana in Finistère.
This is an isolated stone in the Dunbria mountains of La Coruna, Spain, which is a tourist attraction.
Lanyon Quoit on Penwith Moor, Cornwall England UK
Pawton Quoit prehistoric portal dolman early and middle Neolithic period in England 3500-2600 BC the burial monument near St Breock Cornwall UK
Photo of  landscape in the Peneda-Gerês national Park in the Minho district, North of Portugal.
Vintage APS film photo of Lanyon Quoit, Ancient Burial Chamber, West Cornwall UK
Duloe Stone Circle, the smallest in Cornwall, UK. The stones are composed of quartzite.
Free Images: "bestof:Lanyonquoit1.jpg Lanyon Quoit - Megalith - Cornwall - UK own 2006-08-02 waterborough Lanyon Quoit"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day