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long barrow

noun

, Archaeology.
  1. a funerary barrow having an elongate shape, sometimes constructed over a megalithic chamber tomb and usually containing one or more inhumed corpses along with artifacts: primarily Neolithic but extending into the Bronze Age.


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Example Sentences

Wiltshire Police said officers were called to the West Kennet Long Barrow on Sunday afternoon.

From BBC

The West Kennet Long Barrow dates to around 3,650 BC and has been described by archaeologists as being typical of the Early Neolithic period.

From BBC

Dr. Obermaier’s survey of the local terrain pointed to the presence of a long barrow, an elongated stone monument to the dead.

Some came from west Wales and Ireland, where they built stone tombs, while others came from eastern England, where burials were in long barrow mounds.

Another builder impressed by the photograph was Tim Daw, who in 2014 constructed a long barrow – a chambered tomb – for cremated remains in the Wiltshire village of All Cannings.

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