A1June 4, 2026·2 min read·246 words·7 vocab words·Source: New Scientist

A Big Rock at Stonehenge

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A Big Rock at Stonehenge
Photo: New Scientist
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Stonehenge is in England. The altar is at Stonehenge. The is big. It is 5 meters long. It weighs 6 tonnes. The is sandstone. Sandstone has grains of Each grain has a chemical The matches rocks in north-east Scotland. Scotland is 750 kilometers away. The travels a long way. How does the get to Stonehenge? One idea is a A is a big sheet of ice. It moves rocks. The carries the south. It leaves the at Dogger Bank. Dogger Bank is now under the The covers Dogger Bank. Another idea is are strong. They move other big rocks at Stonehenge. Those rocks are 25 to 30 tonnes. So can move the altar too. Scientists study the They think the idea is unlikely. The needs many special events. For example, the sits at Dogger Bank for a long time. Then carry it to Stonehenge. Dogger Bank is under now. So the idea is not good. have the tools and the will. They are not in a hurry. They work for many years. So probably move the altar Researchers want to find the exact place where the comes from. They take more samples. But we may never know why people move the People like special rocks. They choose good stones for their buildings. That is all.

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Comprehension
Question 1 of 4

Where is Stonehenge?

Grammar spotlight

Present Simple for Facts

One point · A1

We use the present simple tense to talk about facts and things that are always true. For example: 'The rock is sandstone.'

From this article

The rock is sandstone.

What to know · A1

Use it today

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Neutral register

Scenario: You see a big rock in a park. You talk about it with a friend.

  1. 01This rock is big.
  2. 02It comes from far away.
  3. 03People bring it here.

Register tip · informal

🎙️ Article Audio — Kokoro TTS

A Big Rock at Stonehenge

Adapted from New Scientist · Read the original. LectoPress rewrites the facts as original graded-reader text for language learners.

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