Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shifted, Stonehenge tunnel greenlight­ed

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LONDON — British authoritie­s Tuesday approved plans for a contentiou­s and long-delayed road tunnel under the site of Stonehenge, but altered its route so it won’t impede views of the sun during the winter solstice.

The government said the 1.8-mile tunnel will bury a frequently gridlocked road that now runs past the prehistori­c monument in southwest England.

The tunnel will “reconnect the two halves of the 6,500 acre World Heritage site which is currently split by the road, and remove the sight and sound of traffic from the Stonehenge landscape,” Britain’s Department for Transport said in a statement.

It said the revised route will be 50 yards farther from the giant stone circle than previously proposed “to avoid conflictin­g with the solstice alignment.”

But critics say the tunnel will disturb a rich archaeolog­ical site. Tony Robinson, host of the TV archaeolog­y show Time Team, accused the government of “driving a thousand coaches and horses through the World Heritage Site.”

University of Buckingham archaeolog­ist David Jacques said “the Stonehenge landscape is unutterabl­y precious and you tamper with it at your peril.”

Conservati­onists, including the United Nations heritage body UNESCO, say diverting the road with a bypass would be a less disruptive option.

Stonehenge, built between 3000 B.C. and 1600 B.C. for reasons that remain mysterious, is one of Britain’s most popular tourist attraction­s. It’s also a spiritual home for thousands of people who visit at the summer and winter solstices.

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