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Miscellaneous

Parc Le Breos
Long Cairn

Parc le Breos Cwm Transepted Long Cairn, Gower, West Glamorgan: Date, Contents, and Context
By Alasdair Whittle and Michael Wysocki

First investigated in 1869, the transepted long cairn of Parc le Breos Cwm was re-excavated in 1960–61 but without a report being published. This account presents a number of radiocarbon dates and a detailed re-examination of the human bone assemblages, and attempts to put the monument in local and regional context. Radiocarbon dates place the long cairn in the later part of the earlier Neolithic, and support a fairly long span of time over which its mortuary deposits were accumulated; they also show secondary re-use of the passage, and perhaps also the deliberate incorporation of very old animal bone from nearby caves. The analysis of the human bone assemblages indicates prior exposure of the remains found in the chambers, in contrast to those in the passage. Variation in musculoskeletal stress markers may indicate a mobile lifestyle for at least some of the male mortuary population. Other lifestyle indicators are noted, and isotopic evidence is presented for a terrestrial and mainly meat-oriented diet in the sampled group. The isolated context and hidden setting of the Parc le Breos Cwm long cairn and the apparently low density of south Welsh monuments are stressed.

Baysdale

Me and my apprentice dodman set off in search of hut circles. I had read somewhere that there were circles just above Baysdale on Kildale/Warren Moor.
We parked up at Hob Hole and marched up the road to the bridleway opposite to the Sloethorn Park road. The weather was terrible and the path was a mud monsters paradise.
The are lots of rocks and boulders strewn along the hillside that leads down to the beck. We investigated quite a few of these and found quite a few possible cups most of which were fairly weathered. You have to be careful around here because the rocks are iron rich, the iron forms nodules in the rocks which weather-out leaving a ‘pseudo cup’.
The was one distinctive rock that we came across that I’m pretty sure has a genuine single cup. The rock is in a significant spot about 20 metres downhill from the path and directly opposite to the junction of the Great Hograh Beck Valley and Baysdale. The rock itself is larger than most of it’s neighbours and has a large weather-polished upper surface. The cup is right in the middle of this surface. I examined the rock for pseudo-cups and found none. There is also some graffitti on the rock dated 1948. There are other possible cups on rocks opposite to the junction of the little Hograh Beck and Baysdale.
You may say “one cup mark, so what?” but considering that there are huge stretches of the UK that are completely devoid of any rock art , one small North Yorks site, is significant.
We failed to find the hut circles as we spent too much time looking at the rocks in the valley. We’ve saved them for another day, preferably in summer.
25/03/03
Update.
I was back in Baysdale yesterday and found another ‘cup’ but following a discussion with a local gamekeeper I am now less convinced that this is rock art and more convinced that these marks could be bullet holes. Apparently the armed forces used standing stones for target practice during WW2. The bullet hole theory was also put forward by Graeme C on his excellent website.
Don’t let this put you off visiting Baysdale, it’s a lovely spot. There are some rather unsatisfactory hut circles at NZ628078 and although I’m not a big fan of grouse butts, if you up there check out the lovely grouse carving in the butt.

Miscellaneous

Sharp Howes
Barrow / Cairn Cemetery

5 large barrows form a well defined cemetery.
The largest barrow is at the southern end of the group is 80 feet across and 8 feet high. This has been built with chalk slabs covered with a layer of earth and capped with chalk rubble. A grave at the centre of the barrow contained a contracted skeleton with a food vessel.

Bronze Age village found with buried megalith

This is quite old news but I’d not read about it before and thought it may be of interest. It comes from British Archaeology Magazine, Issue 59, June 2001.

A complete Middle Bronze Age village has been excavated in Essex. Such settlements are very rare in East Anglia, where the shortage of building stone has meant the survival of few substantial prehistoric remains.

At the heart of the village was a massive, imported standing stone that had been ceremonially buried next to what seems to have been the settlement’s main public building.

The rectangular village enclosure, defined by hedges, contained a number of timber-post roundhouses and rubbish pits, clustered around a large circular building some 15m in diameter which was entered along a long corridor of timber posts. Next to this possibly ceremonial building was a large pit containing a huge, 1-tonne sandstone megalith.

No clues were found to where or when the stone had originally been erected – perhaps in the Neolithic – and it may have been transported to the settlement over some distance. The nearest standing stones known today are several miles to the north in Cambridgeshire. ‘What is particularly interesting is that the stone was ritually decommissioned,’ said site director Nick Shepherd of Framework Archaeology. ‘It is very enigmatic.‘

The Bronze Age settlement lay at the heart of a well-populated landscape of smaller, less well-defined settlements and may have acted as a kind of ceremonial and social ‘capital’ of the region. Less than a mile away was a contemporary cremation pyre site by a stream. Its surrounding ditches were filled with charcoal and bits of human bone. Between the pyre and the settlement lay a cremation cemetery which was not well preserved.

The site was found as part of an unusually large-scale excavation project covering some 57 acres (23 hectares) in advance of carpark construction at Stansted airport. The project has shed light on the intensity of landscape occupation in the Middle Bronze Age, when settlements were spaced at roughly one-mile intervals, and again in the Mid-Late Iron Age. Previously, the low-lying claylands of southern Essex were assumed to have been densely wooded right up to the Roman period.

According to Mr Shepherd, occupation seems to have fallen back dramatically in the later Bronze Age, when climatic conditions worsened, and again in the Saxon period following the collapse of the late Roman rural economy. ‘The soils here are heavy and difficult to work,’ he said. ‘The evidence implies that settlement in this marginal area was only worthwhile when conditions were good.‘

Framework Archaeology, a joint venture between Wessex Archaeology and the Oxford Unit, was set up to undertake commercial excavations within a ‘research framework’, and the Stansted excavation is being conducted accordingly. Instead of sampling the whole site, in the normal manner, and analysing the finds only at the end of the excavation, finds are studied as they come out of the ground. Decisions on where to excavate next are then taken on the basis of new questions that need to be answered. ‘At a normal dig, you find you collect masses of material that turns out to be worthless. That is not happening here,’ Mr Shepherd said.

The buried megalith is likely to be re-erected close to its burial site at the entrance to one of the airport carparks.

The Thunder Stone

Although this large stone is a couple of miles from White Hag I have included it as it is on the approaches to the site.
The stone is a large Shap granite boulder (as are most of the other Thunder Stones in the Shap area). This chap has been built into the farm wall and lies on the Roman Road just after the junction with the Orton to Shap road.
It’s a sad stone, not only is it built into a wall but it then has the further indignity of having a barbed wire fence built across it and various items of rubbish strewn around it including an old tyre and an abandoned car.

Kildale

A couple of sources quote two rings on orthostat walling on Warren Moor.
I parked up by the entrance to Park Farm and walked up the side of the park to the crag that overlooks Kildale, I then followed the path onto Warren Moor and walked down the eastern side of the dry stone wall for about a kilometre, never taking my eyes off the wall. I then retraced my steps along the western side, again studying every inch of the wall. I did come across some vague markings on the eastern side but nothing that I could hand on heart describe as a pair of rings.
This NYM rock art is bloody elusive stuff.

Image of Danby Rigg (Cairn(s)) by fitzcoraldo

Danby Rigg

Cairn(s)

“At the eastern end of the Danby dike there are two ramparts separated by a deep fosse or trench; in the middle and at the western end, three ramparts with two intervening trenches. At the western end a peculiar feature, hitherto undescribed, consists of four small upright stones spaced in an arc on the central ramparts, here much flatter and wider that elsewhere and slightly concave towards the south in conformity with the position of the stones.”
Stanhope White
Early Man in NE Yorkshire

Image credit: fitzcoraldo
Image of Breckon Howe (Round Barrow(s)) by fitzcoraldo

Breckon Howe

Round Barrow(s)

On of the many NYM round barrows with a medieval stone atop it.
There are quite a few large barrows beside road ways which would imply that these roadways probably originated as ancient trackways.
Breckon Howe is situated at the junction between thre pickering to Whitby Road and the Goathland road.

Image credit: fitzcoraldo

Miscellaneous

Hartlepool Mesolithic/Neolithic Forest
Mesolithic site

The earliest peat in this region was layed down about 7000 years ago and may be part of the land bridge that existed between Britain and the rest of Europe. Much of what is now the North sea is thought to have been low-lying fenland.
Roughly 6000 years ago the area was inundated by the sea for the first time, a little over 5000 years ago peat once again began to form as a result of a brief fall in sea level. The bogs were colonised by alder, elm, oak and hazel. The first evidence of human activity is of mesolithic hunter gatherers. There have been frequent finds of the bones and antlers of red deer, some of these antlers have been worked for use as tools.
Around 3000BC pollen records show that the trees were in decline and grasslands were on the increase. At the same time charcoal appears in the deposits. Finds including flints, axes and cut timbers have been found in the deposits.
In 1971 the skeleton of a neolithic man was discovered. The man aged between 25 and 35 had been placed in the peat in a crouched position on his right side. near his right elbow a small group of flints had been placed and there is evidence that his body had been covered with birch twigs.
The peat beds exposed at low tide in Hartlepool Bay are among the largest areas of ancient mesolithic landscape still to be seen.