Some drone work at the souterrain.
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December 29, 2021
December 21, 2021
Winter Solstice at Maes Howe Cairn
Interesting information to be listened to from the professor and the expert on Scandinavian runes. But it is 41 minutes long.
December 11, 2021
Anyone know the Welsh for ‘battleship grey’?
Perhaps one for aficionados only.... if there were not many other substantial cairns in the locale. Bonus site it would be rude not to check out, then?
December 7, 2021
What’s an extra barrow between friends?
December 5, 2021
Blink and you’ll miss it.. which would be a shame.
Rarely have I experienced such a prehistoric upland vibe with so little height gain...
One outta two ‘aint bad, I guess. Especially when the survivor is this good.
Approach and environs of the ‘not-so-white’ White Cairn...
November 27, 2021
But one of a significant series of Mid Walian high hilltops crowned by equally significant Bronze Age cairns, there is no simple way of getting here. But then, perhaps that’s a good thing, right?
November 25, 2021
Another obscure gem of Essex.......
Now Essex doesn’t have a great many round barrows still upstanding.... although upon viewing this – and its not too distant neighbour at Salcott-cum-Virley – one might be tempted to quote the old adage ‘quality before quantity’?
November 24, 2021
At the northern end of Southend-on-Sea. Or something like that....
November 23, 2021
‘Scandinavian design’ not required. Apparently.
November 21, 2021
Visitors might have to stop, pinch themselves and note that... yes... this is indeed Essex.
November 7, 2021
Prof. Mike Parker Pearson @ Waun Mawn
Waun Mawn: a former stone circle near the bluestone quarries for Stonehenge by Prof. Mike Parker Pearson (in English).
In 2017 and 2018 the Stones of Stonehenge Project, led by researchers from University College London and the universities of Southampton, Bournemouth and the Highlands & Islands, carried out excavations at Waun Mawn in North Pembrokeshire to discover if the four monoliths there are all that is left of a prehistoric stone circle. These four monoliths – three of them recumbent and one still standing – form an arc which previous archaeologists have suspected may be remains of a circle. Our excavations discovered a further six empty sockets around the perimeter, revealing that this stone circle was originally 110m in diameter. This makes it one of the largest stone circles in Britain and the same diameter as the ditch around Stonehenge. The team have also been able to establish its age by radiocarbon dating and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) profiling and dating.
November 6, 2021
Garth is the eastern promontory of Drum Ddu, the featured cairn just one of a series of mighty upland monuments gracing the surrounding area.
November 5, 2021
Let’s face it – it was never going to be small.... with a name like ‘Giant’s Grave’, right?
October 9, 2021
‘Big Cairn’.... hey, say what you see, right?
August 14, 2021
Should you be passing...
August 11, 2021
The northern cairn of the northern Carneddau....
The more ‘grassy’ northern cairn upon northern Y Carneddau, near Builth Wells, Powys. SO0665055430
A return to Glan Fedwen...
Now I can – and will – forgive the wondrous OS anything. However, for such a sublime cairn to not be featured upon current mapping is rather odd.......