Eternal Flow

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I must see that cairn then!!

"I reckon St. Patrick did not rid Ireland of snakes but of Serpent Cults"

Oh yeah, it makes sense. What the hell, those 'snake cults' that the church erased were only simplistic and silly representations of the earlier faith; the ancient world must have been full of representations of snakes as well as other spiritual beings and animals. Still, legends retain continuous references to those particular animals in our collective memory.

It is interesting you say the pillar was the foundation for the creation of a later cairn, as most people would tend to think the pillar was put there after it. I agree with you, most archaeologists seem to forget this aspect of continuation, to the extent that many of the big passage graves may have been made up of menhirs or other sacred most ancient paraphernalia, a kind of Ur-recycling of Ur-cults.

As I was told recently by a researcher, 'stone was never wasted in ancient times', in fact, until very recently. Nothing was wasted in any case. Wastefuckers and timewasters are a totally modern phenomenon.

Not too relevant for this thread but in the general snake banishing vein.
Legend has it that one of our local christian saints, Saint Hilda, was so plagued by snakes at her abbey in Whitby that she banished them by driving them over the cliffs, were they instantly became petrified.
Evidence of this is the abundance of serpent stones (ammonites) to be found in the cliffs around Whitby.
This legend has had a scientific 'nod' towards it. One local species of Jurassic ammonite has the latin name Hildoceras.

I will forward a photi tonight cause the McGrails and I were there on Saturday. It's a pretty amazing thing.

It is the same cairn that is mentioned in Pete G's thread entitled something like "New Interpretation Of Rock Art" about the solar eclipse. After seeing the said carvings I ain't so sure. S'pose I should go to that thread and explain why now ..... later on I shall do so.