None have been 'excavated' and any potential deposits beneath securely identified. There may have been a later currick-bashing tradition south of the Lune. If you can find the Slaggyford carved stone, on a sunny day, then you will be in no doubt that the stone erecting and currick building traditions are contiguous. The cross-section of a currick, usually, is also that of a drystone wall. My most important currick - Money Currick - has been reduced by the gamekeeper, who is named Craig and has less than the intelligence of a peanut. He also seems to have stamped my aluminium kettle flat. Slaggyford carved stone can be found on the SMR - maybe under a different name. It's among the 'Far House group'. Send me your postal address and I'll post you an 'entry visa' to these rugged terrains.