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[SCMP Archive] Looking back: 50 years ago

Hong Kong International School gets ready to open its doors for the first time

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[SCMP Archive] Looking back: 50 years ago

[First published on Apr 20, 1991]

25 years ago

Hong Kong has its own “Stonehenge” on Lamma Island. An ovular formation of boulders weighing about half a ton each, it has been estimated to be at least 4000 years old by Prof S.G. Davis, head of the department of geography and geology at the University of Hong Kong.

The stone ring – first noticed in November 1959 – is located high on the west slope of the northwest part of Lamma Island, about 310 feet above sea level, according to Asian Perspectives, recently published by the Hong Kong University Press. Members of the University Archaeology team have since made several visits to examine it.

The rough unhewn natural boulders of coarse-grained granite form an artifact with a slightly constricted waist, and at the widest part measures nine feet by 14½ feet. Twenty-eight stones form the circumference and four more divide it across the waist.

The new Hong Kong International School, described as an American school in Hong Kong, will be ready by next summer, Dr Eugene Seltz, chairman of the Board of Managers, said.

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