MHG63153 - Cup marked stone - Clava-type Cairn, Corrimony (2)
Summary
A cup marked panel on a standing stone at Clava-type Cairn, Corrimony.
Type and Period (1)
- CUP MARKED STONE (Neolithic to Late Bronze Age - 4000 BC? to 551 BC?)
Protected Status
Full Description
NH33SE 6 3830 3030.
(NH 3830 3030) Stone Circle {NR}
OS 6"map, Inverness-shire, 2nd ed., (1904)
This Clava-type passage grave was excavated by Professor Piggot, during the summer of 1952. His excavation has now been filled in.
Before excavation the cairn measured about 60' in diameter, and 8' in height, and was composed, for the most part, of water-worn stones. A large, flat, cup-marked stone, now thought to have been the cap-stone of the chamber lay on top.
Excavation revealed traces of a crouched inhumation burial beneath the flagged floor of the chamber. There were no grave-goods.
Of the 11 stones forming the outer ring round the cairn 4 are modern additions and 2 have been reset in recent times. The stones range from 5' -9' in height. An area of cobbling,apparently an original feature, was revealed between two of the stones on the N.W. One of the stones on the N.W. is said to bear cup-marks on its outer-facing side, but these are now unconvincing.
The only artifact found during excavation, was a bone pin, calcined and eroded, which is now in Nat. Mus. Ants. Scot (EO 956)
S Piggott 1956; A S Henshall 1963
A stone on the NW side of the outer circle has cup marks on the outer face. Another stone, which lay on the W. side of the cairn until 1830, and is now on the top, also has cup marks.
A Mitchell 1875
This cairn, surrounded by a fence, is maintained by the MOW. It is as described above.
Resurveyed at 1/2500.
Visited by OS (N K B) 4 December 1964
Drumnadrochit & Fort Augustus Local Plan, Oct 1991: P13/2.39.
Ancient Mons & Archyl. Sites. POLICY - The Council will safeguard Ancient Mons & Archyl. Sites insofar as this is compatible with its aim of achieving a sound employment base for the local popn. Where conditions are appropriate the Council commends better promotion and Interpn. Of sites for the public benefit.
J Aitken : 05/06/01.
Douglas Scott posted photographs of this cairn on the Highland HER Facebook page in May 2011. He comments that most of the Clava cairn passages are aligned to the midwinter sun or the southern moon, but as shown on the 9th February 2006 at Corrimony, the setting sun shines into the burial chamber in early November and February. As it does so the beam of light will sweep over the centre of the chamber under which the remains of a woman was found facing down the passage towards the setting sun. <1>
This panel was recorded as part of the ScRAP (Scotland’s Rock Art project) by members of NoSAS in August 2020. . <2>
NGR adjusted based on 2017 vertical aerial photographs. This is a standing stone located to the NNW of the Corrimony, a Clava type cairn. The cairn is a 'Property in Care' and monitored by Historic Environment Scotland and regularly visited by the public. The standing stone is situated immediately to the NNW of the minor road to Corrimony on the flat ground about 220m south of the River Enrick. The cairn and associated standing stones are enclosed by a metal fence and approached across a footbridge over the ditch between the road and cairn. Another cupmarked stone, Corrimony 1, forms the capstone of the cairn and lies on the cairn structure.
This schist standing stone may be in its original position but the cairn, first excavated in 1830, has been excavated a number of times since and some of the standing stones have been re-erected. At present the cup marked side of the standing stone faces roughly northwest. The stone is 1.50m high, 1m wide and 0.17m thick and may have been reshaped when it was first used as a standing stone as the top is triangular. There are a few shallow fissures and the stone is covered with lichen. There are 6 circular depressions, at least 4 of which are cupmarks, scattered across the lower half of the standing stone. <3>
NGR adjusted based on 2020 vertical aerial photographs. <4>
Sources/Archives (9)
- --- SHG12493 Image/Photograph(s): Corrimony.. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
- --- SHG1803 Text/Publication/Article: Mitchell, A and Drummond, J. 1874. Vacation notes in Cromar, Burghead, and Strathspey. Including notice of one of the supposed burial-places of St Columba. Proc Soc Antiq Scot Volume 10. 603-89. pp 643-4.
- --- SHG2053 Text/Publication/Volume: Close-Brooks, J. 1986. Exploring Scotland's Heritage: The Highlands. 163, No. 92.
- --- SHG25829 Image/Photograph(s): Puls, A. 2013. Corrimony Cairn HET Visit. Highland Council Planning & Development Service.
- --- SHG357 Text/Publication/Monograph: Henshall, A S. 1963. The chambered tombs of Scotland, Volume 1. Vol. 1, 368-70, (INV 17); plan 369.
- --- SHG749 Text/Publication/Article: Piggott, S. 1956. Excavations in passage-graves and ring-cairns of the Clava group 1952-3. Proc Soc Antiq Scot Volume 88. 173-207. pp 174-84, 197-8, 200-7.
- <1> SHG25262 Interactive Resource/Webpage: Highland Council. 2011. Highland HER Facebook page. Yes. Douglas Scott, 18/05/2011.
- <2> SHG28055 Interactive Resource/Online Database: Historic Environment Scotland. 2017-. Scotland's Rock Art (ScRAP). ScRAP ID 3534.
- <3> SHG28725 Image/Photograph(s)/Aerial Photograph/Vertical: Get Mapping. 2020. Getmapping aerial photography 2020. XY
Map
Location
Grid reference | Centred NH 3829 3030 (6m by 6m) (2 map features) |
---|---|
Map sheet | NH33SE |
Civil Parish | URQUHART AND GLENMORISTON |
Geographical Area | INVERNESS |
Finds (0)
Related Monuments/Buildings (0)
Related Investigations/Events (1)
External Links (3)
- http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/SM90081 (Online designation description (Historic Environment Scotland))
- https://canmore.org.uk/site/12256 (View HES Canmore entry for this site)
- https://www.rockart.scot/rock-art-database/?scrapToolsaction=datatools:panel.view_all&id=9AC3A8B7-E6E9-4FF2-9E9E70425EA94DEB (View the ScRAP record for this site)
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