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From stones to steel

More captivating than Stonehenge was the Tata Steel plant at Port Talbot in South Wales
Dilnavaz E. Bhagwagar

One of the big attractions on our 17-day tour of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland was a visit to Stonehenge, supposedly the most famous pre-historic monument in the world. It consists of a ring of standing stones, each stone around 13 ft high and seven ft wide. It is believed that Stonehenge was a burial ground. Remains of human bones from 3000 BC have been found here. To be honest, it left me cold. What really delighted the six Indians (Shehnaz and Abdul Abdullah from Surat, Ava and her husband Gopal Khullar from Delhi, my husband Edul and me from Nagpur),......



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