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Cist B Capstone
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Hmmm... - been a while since I came to this page, but it looks like CP is still rather neglected by megalithic enthusiasts. I guess one thing I forgot to mention 3 years ago last time I posted here (OK, I'm to blame, too, but I'm doing a whole website on the place, so can hardly be accused of neglect!) is that one of the upshots of my incumbency at CP in late 2003 was that I rediscovered the "lost" capstone of Cist B. However, although my re-find was authenticated by none other than Gordon Barclay, good ol’ Historic Scotland still haven’t flagged it up for visitors, so now totally fed up with that situation, I’m flagging it up here myself for any MS readers thinking of visiting.

If you go inside the modern concrete flying-saucer that represents Cairn 2, you'll only see one of the two Bronze Age cists reconstructed there – the one Piggott called Cist A. The smaller Cist B was slightly to the east of Cist A (and square in shape). But why didn't the Ministry of Works reconstruct Cist B in the '50s? Many theories have been put forward, not least the erroneous auld saw currently peddled by one of the 2003 Broxburn Library exhibition-boards currently being recycled in the visitor’s centre: ie. the idea that Piggott’s team somehow broke the Cist B capstone during excavation, and it was presumably subsequently secreted away under some conspiratorial carpet or something. This is complete tosh, of course – Piggott was far from incompetent!

The truth is that the Cist B capstone is now to be found dumped on the western side of the cairn area, curiously lined into the kerb of Cairn 3. Stand to the west, and find the big, flat, square sandstone block that actually looks nothing like a kerbstone – in the kerb. That’s the Cist B capstone, and it’s been sitting there for 50 years and until I took a fag-break one afternoon in 2003, everyone had been walking past it.

One can only assume that when the MoW were doing the Disnae-Land reconstruction in the 50s, they did so without consultation of either Piggott or his plans. Look at his PSAS paper – there’s no stone marked where this one is.

The pressing question now is – will Historic Scotland return it to its proper place inside the Cairn 2 reconstruction? So far, my nudges have come to naught, despite the weathering the stone is suffering in the open (unlike most stones onsite, this one’s not igneous, but soft-ish local sandstone) – cost issues…

However, now you know where the second primary Bronze Age burial remnant is, and you know where to find it. :-)


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Posted by suibhne
19th June 2006ce
14:28