A tumulus, not marked on the Ordnance sheet. It is also sometimes called ‘Moel Cerrig Gwynion,’ and is visible for some distance, the white quartz stones upon it rendering it conspicuous. It has a height of 8 to 10 feet, with a circumference at base of 250 feet. No traces of its having been opened are to be detected. On its summit sheep have worn a slight depression, and the part so exposed shos the tumulus to be constructed of earth and small stones; the outer covering, now largely grass-grown, being formed of the white quartz already noted above. -- Visited, 6th September, 1910.
An inventory of the Ancient and Historical Monuments of the County of Montgomery (1911).