'New Stonehenge' uncovered in Ireland during summer heatwave

Daily Mail - Science & tech 

Incredible aerial photographs of a'new Stonehenge' have been snapped over Ireland as a summer heatwave reveals the foundations of ancient buildings across the British Isles. The never-before-seen monument is made up of a ring of prehistoric ditches now buried deep underground. It was spotted in County Meath close to a 5,000-year-old Neolithic tomb called Newgrange. Historic landmarks have been cropping up across the UK over the past few weeks as a recent bout of hot weather uncovers imprints on fields and lawns that mark the sites of various old and prehistoric features. The outlines of World War II airfields and shelters have appeared in Hampshire and Cambridge, as well as long-buried Roman villages in Wales and Norfolk and a once-removed Victorian garden in Lancashire.