Heard Of Skara Brae?
You should have as it changes history.
In 1850, a farmer discovered a hidden village.
Later, it was found to be older than the Great Pyramid of Egypt.
Archaeologists estimate that the village was home to about 100 people.
The village was known as "the Pompeii of Scotland," or Skara Brae. The houses were connected by tunnels, and each house was sealed off with a stone door.
An ancient site on a small island in the Atlantic Ocean, north of Scotland, remains shrouded in mystery to this day.
Overlooking Skyle Bay on the Mainland Island, the largest of the Orkney Islands in the North Sea, once stood the Neolithic settlement of Skara Brae.
According to archaeologists, this settlement consisted of about 10 houses and is believed to have been inhabited by ~3100 BC or perhaps a 1000 years or more earlier.
This represents what may become an even larger site spanning dozens of locations.
Now you know.