Very soon, Denmark's Stone Age structures – the large passage tombs that are older than the Pyramids – will be a part of the European Cultural Route known as Megalithic Routes. Megalithic Routes winds its way in and out of the German, Dutch, Swedish and Danish landscapes, where ancient megalithic graves are visible and tell of a common European culture 5,000 years ago. The route is a German idea that the Danish Agency for Culture has helped develop and propose as a European Cultural Route to the Council of Europe because Stone Age graves comprise an interesting historical component of our common past. The Council has given its go-ahead to the idea, and an opening ceremony will take place at the Klekkendehøj passage grave on the island of Møn on Tuesday, 27 August 2013, between 10 and 11 o'clock in the morning. Director of the European Institute of Cultural Routes, Penelope Denu, will present the approval for the project to the chairperson for Megalithic Routes, Bodo Zehm; and Danish Minister for Culture Marianne Jelved will dedicate the route together with its progenitor, the German local historian Klaus de Laak, by cutting the ribbon to an exhibition in the passage grave with a flint dagger. BN