These giant monuments are 1,000 years older than Stonehenge and share an interesting connection with water.
by Rupendra Brahambhatt
December 22, 2025

Vishaps at a site in Armenia. Image credits: Sonashen/Wikimedia Commons
Archaeologists have struggled to explain why, 6,000 years ago, people dragged these giant monuments into frozen, harsh, high-altitude terrainoften above 2,700 meterswhere snow limits human activity to just a few summer months. Some argued they marked territory, while others saw them as purely symbolic or decorative. However, nobody could confirm the exact purpose these silent stones served.
A new study now reveals the clearest answer yet. The stones were built for worship, and not for decoration or as territory markers. But this wasnt your typical pagan cult.
The findings support the hypothesis that vishaps were closely associated with an ancient water cult, as they are predominantly situated near water sources, including high-altitude springs and discovered prehistoric irrigation systems, the study authors note.
Scattered across Armenias highest mountains are giant carved stones that seem wildly out of place. Some stand taller than a two-storey building, yet none of these mysterious vishaps or dragon stones sit near known archaeological sites such as ancient villages.
Vishaps at a site in Armenia. Image credits: Sonashen/Wikimedia Commons
Archaeologists have struggled to explain why, 6,000 years ago, people dragged these giant monuments into frozen, harsh, high-altitude terrainoften above 2,700 meterswhere snow limits human activity to just a few summer months. Some argued they marked territory, while others saw them as purely symbolic or decorative. However, nobody could confirm the exact purpose these silent stones served.
A new study now reveals the clearest answer yet. The stones were built for worship, and not for decoration or as territory markers. But this wasnt your typical pagan cult.
The findings support the hypothesis that vishaps were closely associated with an ancient water cult, as they are predominantly situated near water sources, including high-altitude springs and discovered prehistoric irrigation systems, the study authors note.
Taking a closer look at the giant monuments
Dragon stones come in three main typologies: Fish-shaped stones (piscis), stretched cattle-hide shapes (vellus), and hybrid forms combining both motifs. Researchers from Yerevan State University and the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography analyzed 115 vishaps across the Armenian Highlands, using a combination of GPS mapping, elevation analysis, precise stone measurements, and radiocarbon dating.

Credit: npj Heritage Science, 2025.
This is the first study to do so at this scale. Until now, dragon stones had never been studied in such large numbers. The researchers combined landscape mapping, stone measurements, and carving details to look for patterns that single-site studies had missed.
One detail stood out immediately. Every vishap is polished on all sides except one narrow end.
The majority of vishaps are either collapsed or placed horizontally on the ground. However, all three typological groups of vishaps exhibit carving and polishing on all faces, with the tail invariably left uncarved. This consistent feature strongly suggests that vishaps were originally positioned upright, the study authors said.
More:
https://www.zmescience.com/science/news-science/dragons-stones-connected-to-water/
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