megalithix
megalithix
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megalithix · 5 years ago
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The New Northern Antiquarian
The New Northern Antiquarian
Subscribers will all have noticed that I’ve hardly been adding any site-profiles over the last year.  I can only apologise for this.  The reasons for this are simple:  I’ve been working on upgrading the blog into a website — which at long last has become active.  It’s exhausted me at times — not least because, from the outset I didn’t have the foggiest idea on how to create a website.  Added to…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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St. Margaret's Stone, Dunfermline, Fife
St. Margaret’s Stone, Dunfermline, Fife
Cup-Marked Stone:  OS Grid Reference – NT 10837 85060
Getting Here
St Margarets Stone, 1856 map
Take the A823 road out of Dunfermline south towards Rosyth. A half-mile before you hit the motorway roundabout, at the roundabout where Carnegie Avenue takes you east, turn west and park up along the road where the modern business park lives.  30-40 yards from the roundabout, set back on the pavement,…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Flat Howe (1), Sleight Moor, Sleights, North Yorkshire
Flat Howe (1), Sleight Moor, Sleights, North Yorkshire
Cairn:  OS Grid Reference – NZ 85483 04866
Also Known as:
Flat Howe (north)
Getting Here
Flat Howe on 1853 OS-map
Along the A169 road that runs may miles from Whitby to Pickering, as you go through the small town of Sleights, the road gets steep for a mile or so, until you reach the moorland tops, where the road runs dead straight.  After 1.2 miles (1.93km) along the straight road, a small minor…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Little Almscliffe Crags, Stainburn, North Yorkshire
Little Almscliffe Crags, Stainburn, North Yorkshire
Legendary Rocks:  OS Grid Reference – SE 23237 52275
Also Known as:
Little Almes Cliffe
Little Almias Cliff Crag
Getting Here
Little Almscliffe on 1851 map
Coming from Harrogate, take the B6162 and B6161 road to Beckwithshaw, through the village and, 4-500 yards on, turn right onto Norwood Lane.  2 miles along, keep your eyes peeled on your left for a gravelled parking spot and you’ll see the…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Tom-a-Clachan, Kirkmichael, Perthshire
Stone Circle (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – NO 0808 5985
Archaeology & History
Kirkmichael parish was an area that was described by George Chalmers (1887) as possessing “a vast body of Druid remains,” there being “a number of Druid cairns in the vicinity of Druidical circles.”  As we know, the term ‘druid’ has long fallen out of favour; and with it in this area, the sites themselves have taken…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Clowder (1), Arncliffe, North Yorkshire
Clowder (1), Arncliffe, North Yorkshire
Enclosures:  OS Grid Reference – SD 9165 6968
Also Known as:
Clouder
Getting Here
Looking down on Clowder-1
To the right of The Falcon Inn across from Arncliffe village green is a trackway called the Monk’s Way.  Walk up here for about 450 yards until there’s a stile on your right which is the start of the diagonal footpath SW up the hillside.  Once you hit the limestone ridge several hundred…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Heygate Stone, Baildon Moor, West Yorkshire
Heygate Stone, Baildon Moor, West Yorkshire
Cup-and-Ring Stone:  OS Grid Reference – SE 15942 40187
Heygate Stone
Archaeology & History
This excellent cup-and-ring marked petroglyph was found fortuitously in September 2001 by the land-owner at Near Hey Gate field to the northeast of Baildon village.  He was clearing out remains of some old walling in the field and, adjacent, a rock that was protruding out of the ground got turned over. …
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Cloven Hoof Well, Shipley Glen, West Yorkshire
Cloven Hoof Well, Shipley Glen, West Yorkshire
Healing Well:  OS Grid Reference – SE 12839 39331
Also Known as:
Raygate Well
Getting Here
Cloven Hoof Well, Shipley Glen
On the roadside at Shipley Glen, from Brackenhall Circlewalk up for about 250 yards, where you’ll notice the land dips as it drops into the woods below. Follow this dried stream down until you reach the mossy Loadpit Beck in the valley.  By the waterside is a footpath: follow…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Lower Headley Farm, Thornton, Bradford, West Yorkshire
Lower Headley Farm, Thornton, Bradford, West Yorkshire
Tumulus (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – SE 099 321
Archaeology & History
Lower Headley Farm urn
There are no longer any remains of the prehistoric burial site that once stood in one of the fields by Lower Headley Farm.  We don’t know whether the site was a cairn, a tumulus, or just a stone-lined cist; but in all probability it would have been a low rounded hillock whose existence had long since…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Holy Well, Baildon, West Yorkshire
Holy Well, Baildon, West Yorkshire
Holy Well (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – SE 1609 3961
Archaeology & History
Site of the Holy Well in 1852
This site is all but unknown to the great majority of folk in Baildon, and even some of the local historians have let it slip from their investigative tendrils.  According to the primary Baildon historian, W.Paley Baildon, it was first known as the ‘Halliwell Holy Well’.  In his magnum opus
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Gawk Hall Stone, Middleton Moor, North Yorkshire
Gawk Hall Stone, Middleton Moor, North Yorkshire
Cup-Marked Stone:  OS Grid Reference – SE 13004 53097
Getting Here
Gawk Hill Stone
Probably the easiest route to find this is via the Roman Road from Blubberhouses. Go up Cooper Lane a few hundred yards, turning right (west) on the footpath past the Manor House and onto the moor. Walk along the footpath until you hit the dead straight Roman Road and walk 1⅓ miles (past the cup-marked Eagle Stone)…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Kalemouth Carving, Eckford, Roxburghshire
Kalemouth Carving, Eckford, Roxburghshire
Cup-and-Ring Stone:  OS Grid Reference – NT 714 275
Archaeology & History
Kalemouth carving (after R.W.B. Morris 1981)
Now housed in the National Museum of Antiquities in Edinburgh, this little-known petroglyph was rediscovered in 1957 by a Mr G.F. Ritchie, not far from the once-large Kalemouth neolithic tomb.  A carving that seems to be quite isolated (no others are known about in this area),…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Tumble Beacon, Banstead, Surrey
Tumble Beacon, Banstead, Surrey
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Tumulus:  OS Grid Reference – TQ 2432 5902
Archaeology & History
This ancient “bowl barrow” as the modern archaeo’s are wont to describe it, is a Bronze Age tumulus that has seen better days.  But at least it’s still there – albeit slightly damaged and enclosed by modern housing, in the back of someone’s garden.  I expect that if you were to ask the owners, it would be OK to see this 4000 year…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Bedford Park, Tooting, Surrey
Bedford Park, Tooting, Surrey
Tumulus (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – TQ 288 726
Archaeology & History
This long lost prehistoric tomb is one of many that has fallen under the destructive hammer of the christian Industrialists in this part of the country.  Located somewhere in the parkland grounds of Bedfordhill House (also destroyed), its memory was thankfully preserved by the renowned folklorist and historian Walter…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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St. Peter's Well, Leeds, West Yorkshire
St. Peter’s Well, Leeds, West Yorkshire
Holy Well (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – SE 308 336
Archaeology & History
Position of the now lost St Peter’s Well on 1852 map
This is one of three wells that were dedicated to St Peter in the Leeds district.  The first of them, near the city centre, was described by the northern antiquarian Ralph Thoresby (1715) as being in St. Peter’s Square—which has now been completely built over, but was…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Horn Bank, Rigton, North Yorkshire
Horn Bank, Rigton, North Yorkshire
Settlement (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference – SE 2905 5035
Archaeology & History
Horn Bank site on 1910 map
Upon the top of the old ridge where ran the ancient trackway between Rigton and Pannal, could once be found a multi-period settlement, long since gone – as happens all too often in this neck o’ the woods.  And unfortunately there doesn’t appear to be any sketch plans of the site.  It was…
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megalithix · 6 years ago
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Briscoe Rigg, Rigton, North Yorkshire
Briscoe Rigg, Rigton, North Yorkshire
Settlement (destroyed):  OS Grid Reference — SE 2581 5100
Archaeology & History
Briscoe Rigg on 1851 map
Highlighted on the 1851 OS-map of the area as a ‘Camp’, all trace of this ancient settlement would seem to have been destroyed.  It was already on its way out when the Ordnance Survey lads looked at it again in 1888, finding barely a trace of it.  Thankfully though, when the clearer eyes of…
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