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- Q1416847 subject Q8486460.
- Q1416847 subject Q8491070.
- Q1416847 subject Q8615001.
- Q1416847 subject Q9036797.
- Q1416847 abstract "This is a list of erratics on and around Rügen – the largest island off the Baltic coast of Germany. An erratic is usually defined (in Germany) as an individual block of rock lying on the surface of the land which has a volume of at least one cubic metre and which was transported by a glacier to its present site during the ice age.Before the establishment of ice age theories, many stories and legends were woven around the giant "erratic blocks" of rock. On Rügen, there are a lot of interesting large erratics due to the particular location of the island during the ice ages and due to continuous coastal erosion. In the New Stone Age people built megalithic tombs out of erratics. On Rügen many of these have survived. Until the 19th century large erratics were used as quarries, in order to produce construction material for monuments (e. g. in 1854 the Prussia Columns near Neukamp and Groß Stresow or for the Ernst Moritz Arndt Tower on the Rugard, for coastal and harbour defences, cobblestones and millstones. Many erratics fell victim to the development of Rügen. Today erratics are seen as natural monuments that are worth keeping and have a greater significance.Data on the largest erratics on Rügen is given in the table below. Further information may be found on the individual article pages.".
- Q1416847 thumbnail Schwanenstein_2.jpg?width=300.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1017634.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1316027.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1416843.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q14664222.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1530151.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1542312.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q164240.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q188040.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1958215.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2109162.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2174819.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2253097.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2282414.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q23790.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q25517.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2610088.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q283202.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2996907.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q3237.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q36422.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q372363.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q372934.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q4110.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q427711.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q460219.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q49367.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q494631.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q545.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q628382.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q642689.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6502866.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q661400.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6663587.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q670985.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q679173.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q759421.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q769680.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8063.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8486460.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8491070.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8615001.
- Q1416847 wikiPageWikiLink Q9036797.
- Q1416847 comment "This is a list of erratics on and around Rügen – the largest island off the Baltic coast of Germany. An erratic is usually defined (in Germany) as an individual block of rock lying on the surface of the land which has a volume of at least one cubic metre and which was transported by a glacier to its present site during the ice age.Before the establishment of ice age theories, many stories and legends were woven around the giant "erratic blocks" of rock.".
- Q1416847 label "Glacial erratics on and around Rügen".
- Q1416847 depiction Schwanenstein_2.jpg.