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Two hundred thousand tonnes of rock. Carved from a single hill. At Kailasa Temple, Ellora, ancient builders hollowed out a mountainside to create the largest monolithic structure in the world. Chiselled from the top down, the temple rises 96 feet high, complete with pillared mandapas, sculpted galleries, towering stambhs and colossal stone elephants. No stone was brought in. Everything was removed. Historian William Dalrymple describes it as a creation of “pure genius.” Yet the questions remain. How did generations visualise such precision inside solid basalt? Where did up to 200,000 tonnes of excavated rock disappear to? And how did a dynasty few speak of today create one of India’s greatest monuments? But the mysteries do not end in Ellora. In the harsh, prehistoric landscape of Hire Benakal, thousands of megaliths spread across nearly 200,000 square metres. Granite dolmens with circular portals. Three sided stone chambers capped with heavy slabs. Arranged east to west for nearly a kilometre. Believed to date back 2500 to 3000 years, this vast necropolis may have been an Iron Age burial ground. Rock paintings hint at ritual, dance or forgotten belief systems. With no motorable road, the site still feels isolated from time itself. Three thousand kilometres away, in the rain washed hills of Meghalaya, lies Nartiang Monolith Park. Here, towering menhirs and dolmens still stand as part of a living tradition. Oral histories speak of Jaintia kings, ancestral commemorations and even a giant named Mar Phalangki who sacrificed a man to raise a 25 foot stone called Moo Iong Syiem. Unlike Hire Benakal, the stones here are woven into community memory, market rituals and identity. From Ellora’s chiselled mountain to the necropolis of Karnataka and the living monoliths of Meghalaya, similar forms echo across continents. Sites like Stonehenge raise the same question. Were these cultures connected? Or did ancient societies across the world independently arrive at the same monumental language of stone? These are enigmas in stone. And they continue to challenge everything we think we know.