The pillars that form Stonehenge may have been chosen because they were like sacred “prehistoric glockenspiels”, according to researchers.

The sonorous quality of some of the bluestones used for the monument built between 3,000 BC and 1,600 BC may explain why they were transported 200 miles from Pembrokeshire, Wales, when there were plenty of local rocks to use nearby.

‘Archeo-acoustic’ expert Paul Devereux, the principal investigator on the Landscape and Perception Project, explained the choice to the BBC.

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“There had to be something special about these rocks,” he said.

“Why else would they take them from here [Wales] all the way to Stonehenge?”

“It hasn't been considered until now that sound might have been a factor,” he said.

Shape Created with Sketch. In pictures: Project to modernise facilities at Stonehenge finally opens Show all 7 left Created with Sketch. right Created with Sketch. Shape Created with Sketch. In pictures: Project to modernise facilities at Stonehenge finally opens 1/7 Further work to decommission the existing facilities, built in 1968, and returning the car park to grass will commence on the beginning of next year. The transformation is the largest capital project ever undertaken by English Heritage Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 2/7 The World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire where a 27 million pound project to modernise facilities at Stonehenge will finally open after decades of planning, on the right is part of the A344 road which passed close to the landmark and has been grassed over Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 3/7 The new centre, designed by architects Denton Corker Marshall, lies a mile-and-a-half to the west of the stones Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 4/7 Young visitors to the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire attempt to pull a sarsen stone outside the new visitor centre PA PA 5/7 Stonehenge is not immediately visible from the visitor centre, with tourists able to use a 10-minute shuttle bus or walk down a newly-reconnected ancient processional approach PA PA 6/7 A young visitor to the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire experiences a virtual sunrise in the new visitor centre Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 7/7 The sun sets on the new visitor centre in Stonehenge James O. Davies/English Heritage/PA Wire James O. Davies/English Heritage/PA Wire 1/7 Further work to decommission the existing facilities, built in 1968, and returning the car park to grass will commence on the beginning of next year. The transformation is the largest capital project ever undertaken by English Heritage Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 2/7 The World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire where a 27 million pound project to modernise facilities at Stonehenge will finally open after decades of planning, on the right is part of the A344 road which passed close to the landmark and has been grassed over Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 3/7 The new centre, designed by architects Denton Corker Marshall, lies a mile-and-a-half to the west of the stones Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 4/7 Young visitors to the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire attempt to pull a sarsen stone outside the new visitor centre PA PA 5/7 Stonehenge is not immediately visible from the visitor centre, with tourists able to use a 10-minute shuttle bus or walk down a newly-reconnected ancient processional approach PA PA 6/7 A young visitor to the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge near Salisbury in Wiltshire experiences a virtual sunrise in the new visitor centre Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA Chris Ison/PA Wire -PA 7/7 The sun sets on the new visitor centre in Stonehenge James O. Davies/English Heritage/PA Wire James O. Davies/English Heritage/PA Wire

The study by researchers from Royal College of Art in London tried to record what “Stone Age eyes and ears” would have heard and seen in a prehistoric landscape.

To make the findings published in the ‘Journal of Time & Mind’, the team was given unprecedented access by English Heritage to the Carn Menyn ridge on Mynydd Preseli, south-west Wales, where many of Stonehenge's bluestones were quarried.

When the thousands of stones were struck with small hammerstones, researchers found that they gave off metallic sounds like bells, gongs or tin drums.

“There's lots of different tones, you could play a tune,” Mr Devereux said, adding: “In fact, we have had percussionists who have played proper percussion pieces off the rocks."

To prove their theory, when researchers tested all the bluestones at Stonehenge, several were found to make distinctive sounds, despite their acoustic potential being dampened by being set deep in the ground.

A number of bluestones at Stonehenge show evidence of having been struck, confirming why so many Neolithic monuments exist in the region, and provides strong evidence that the sounds made the landscape sacred to Stone Age people, the study concluded.

Professor Tim Darvill, an archaeology professor at Bournemouth University who has undertaken hundreds of excavations at Stonehenge, explained to the BBC that “pre-historic attitudes to stone” are likely to have been different to those of today.

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“We don't know of course that they moved them because they rang but ringing rocks are a prominent part of many cultures,” he said.

“You can almost see them as a pre-historic glockenspiel, if you like, and you could knock them and hear these tunes.

"And soundscapes of pre-history are something we're really just beginning to explore," he said.