Little Badger Stone forum 1 room
Image by David Raven
close
more_vert

Bradford council (off the top of my head) have published a pdf list of the stones around there. It must be useful if you're nearby - eight figure map references. I'm starting to think the best carved stones are in Ireland - it's just those pictures. or maybe the best is the one nearest. They were certainly intended to be viewed at specific times of the year and day.

I think some of the best execution has to be on the Irish passage graves, but the most amazing (variety-wise) is certainly in GB.

I am constantly amazed at what I see appearing on TMA in the rock-art dept.

I think the vast majority of Irish rock-art panels are buried under 6ft or more of peat and will never been seen again. I tried to find some on Sunday that was visible 15 years ago, but is now covered by sod.

>Bradford council (off the top of my head) have published a pdf list of the stones >around there...

Have they? I'll have to take a look at that. Is it on the Bradford Council site?

>I'm starting to think the best carved stones are in Ireland - it's just those pictures.

Irish rock art is wonderful.... those decorated tombs are stunning! Irish RA certainly seems to use a wide vocabulary of symbols that don't figure in British RA... perhaps a different tradition or dialect of RA than the British panels, which seem to work more around variations of theme such as cups n' rings... of course there's always exceptions.

In Scottish and Northumbrian/Cumbrian RA, cups with multiple rings are quite common, whereas they are rare in Yorkshire, which tends to favour grooves enclosing groups of cups or forming a more abstract design. It is rare to find cups with more than a single ring... there are notable exceptions, but they seem to be the exception rather than the rule.

I love it all to be honest and couldn't say that one tradition is better than another... obviously, coming from Yorkshire I have a slight bias to Yorkshire RA, and I'm constantly delighted by the amount of invention in British rock art as a whole.