Some archaeologists interpreted as drawing sperm that is repeated in the two menhirs ....... but others support the traditional interpretation as "hache emmanchée" the plow or "thing."
There is also this reason in the Cairn of Kercado Carnac ........... or Dombate.
http://megalithe.over-blog.com/article-34537920.html
http://megalithe.over-blog.com/article-34767671.html
Grand Menhir, or Men Er Grah, is cut in orthogneiss (type of coarse-grained granitoid rocks and much pastry) foreign Locmariaquer peninsula where the soil is formed, as at Carnac, on the grained granite. It could come from an outcrop located across the Gulf of Morbihan, and was thus carried on more than ten kilometers by means as yet undetermined.
the early Neolithic 5000 years BC, the sea was several feet below its level, the shoreline was located approximately 300m further than the modern coast and the Gulf of Morbihan consisted of a series of hills interspersed with valleys, and traversed by rivers of Auray and Vannes. These rivers can still access the back country by water, it is conceivable that the transport blocks orthogneiss has been possible partly by using floating rafts.
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