
The ‘real one’ photographed in May 2000.
The ‘real one’ photographed in May 2000.
The Northumberland ‘rosettes’ at Buttony, Near Wooler. September 2000.
View to the east over the Broomridge-2 rock art panel to the Goatscrag. August 1998.
Cups, some unusual shaped, at Broomridge-2 rock art site. August 1998.
View over the site to the South. May 2002.
Over 100 cup-marks form-up what looks like a horse without legs. The whole rectangular outcrop has been used for this remarkable design.
Detail of a motif which really is a ‘variation’ of the more common cup-and-ring carvings. It looks like a chicken or jellyfish. Where there already chickens in Northumberland in the late Stone- and early bronze Age?
A panel of rock art with a nice double keyhole motif at the top.
Detail of the keyhole motif. It looks as if the (sharper) outrunning grooves are aditionals to the original cup-and-rings motif.
Panel e. Small motif besides the keyhole one.
Panel c. Two cups with a shallow one in the middle. May 2002.
Another decorated outcrop besides the reconstructed cairn. May 2002.
Another carved rock in the direct neighbourhood of the cairn. May 2002.
Rock panel before the (reconstructed) cairn. May 2002.
Fowberry Cairn; (Near Wooler, Northumberland). View over the main panel to the SW with The Cheviot visible in the background. May 2002. (Photo by Gus)
Fowberry Cairn (Near Wooler, Northumberland). April 2000; the main panel under the cairn nearly overgrown by mosses. Compare with the following photo of May 2002.
Fowberry Cairn; The main panel of rock art on outcrop rock a few meters East of the (reconstructed) cairn. May 2002. Compare this one with the 2000 pic of the same -but overgrown-panel.
Glasserton Mains (Wigtownshire, Dumfries & Galloway); faint cup-and-(gapped)-rings on a rough surface. Site has views to the sea.
Detail of the carvings.
Broughton Mains-1 (Wigtownshire, Dumfries & Galloway), detail of the most western carvings from another angle.
This is the photo mentioned by Fitzcoraldo.
Duncroisk; view over a panel with cup-marks to the South. May 2002.
Duncroisk; a wet panel with rock art. May 2002.
Duncroisk North of Killin (Central). This panel of rock art was called “The Face” by Ronald W. B. Morris in “The Prehistoric Rock Art of Southern Scotland” (BAR British Series 86, 1981).
Close-up of Coldmartin Loughs-2, a decorated boulder, due East of the Communication Tower and South of the Coldmartin Loughs-1 site.
Coldmartin Loughs-2; a decorated boulder, found by me in August 1998, with site 1 in the background.
Coldmartin Loughs 1; a nice panel of rock art East of the communication tower.
View over a cup-and-ring decorated outcrop rock at the (Upper) Breas of Cultallich Farm to the West. May 2002.
An unusual motif at the beautiful rock art site Balmacnaughton on the Southern banks of Loch Tay, West of Aberfeldy. May 2002
Millstone Burn; stone 1a (East of the road). May 2002.
Millstone Burn; owl-face. May 2002.
Millstone Burn, stone 2h, May 2002.
Ballochmyle. The deer carving taken in May 2002! There are actually two deer visible. But....%%#*@!!.. what?...coloured chalk, paint?......and look around; litter and garbage; pure vandalism! What a shame! Are there solutions? Who has the answers?
Ballochmyle. Sunny symbols on the cornerstone between the left and right wall. May 2002.
Ballochmyle. The left-side wall with decorating vegetation; peace and tranquility!
Ballochmyle. Upper part of the wall. It looks like airoplanes flying at you! (Always easily carried away at rock art sites!)
Ballochmyle. Part of the main wall with a lot of cup-and-ring motifs. However, there is only one with a clear outrunning groove.
Ballochmyle. Main wall, May 2002.
Gled Law 3. View over the decorated outcrop to the South.
Gled Law 3 . A nice panel of rock art with great views to the Cheviots, easy to reach along a public footpath.
Gled Law 2 . The right cup-and-ring motif shows nine concentric rings and this is thought to be the lagest number of rings in Great-Britain.