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Canmore ID |
11866 |
SCRAP ID |
364 |
Location OS Grid Ref: |
NG 89780 24509
|
Team |
Not in team
|
Existing Classifications
|
Classification |
Period |
CUP MARKED STONE |
PREHISTORIC |
|
Date Fieldwork Started |
19/04/2019 |
Date Fieldwork Completed |
|
New Panel? |
No |
|
A1. Identifiers
Panel Name |
CARR |
Number |
|
Other names |
|
HER/SMR |
|
SM Number |
|
Other |
|
Classifications And Periods
Classification 1 |
Cup Marked Stone |
Period 1 |
Neol/bronze Age |
Classification 2 |
Standing Stone |
Period 2 |
Period Unknown |
County
ROSS AND CROMARTY
A2. Grid Reference(original find site)
OS NGR |
NG |
89780 |
24510 |
New OS NGR |
NG |
89780 |
24509 |
Lat/Long |
57.26275 |
-5.48756 |
Obtained By: |
Mobile Phone
|
A3. Current Location & Provenance
Located |
|
Accession no. |
Not given |
B1. Landscape Context
Weather |
Sunny Intervals
|
Position in landscape |
Hillside |
Topography(terrain within about 500m of panel.) |
Sloping |
Aspect of slope (if on sloping terrain e.g. S, SE etc.) |
SE |
B2. Current land use & vegetation
B3. Forestry
B4. Archaeological Features within 200m / or visible from the panel
B5. Location Notes
This stone is to be found on the hillside about 100m N of the ruined Carr farm and associated abandoned settlement near to the Carr Brae viewpoint above Loch Duick. It enjoys a SE aspect with a view to the SE & S up to and across the head of Loch Duick at Shiel Bridge and the prominent hill of Sgurr Mhic Bharraich above Ratagan. The stone is in an area of rough grazing, which appears to be used for horses, although none were present at the time of the visit. It was originally recorded in 1897 as a boulder with 15 cup marks on its uppermost surface but it nowadays it appears to have the guise of a standing stone, albeit it leaning about 30 degrees from the vertical. The dimensions also tally with the original at 1.6m on the long axis (plus whatever is underground), essentially now the height and a width/depth of 0.8m/0.6m.
Previous Notes
NG82SE 1 8978 2451.
There is a boulder covered with cup-marks at Carr (NG 89 24)
T Wallace 1897.
At NG 8978 2451, close by the now deserted buildings of Carr, is a boulder, c. 1.8m long, c.0.8 m wide and c. 0.5m thick, lying on the slope. On its uppermost surface are 15 cup marks, the best defined being 3 inches in diameter and 1 inch deep. The majority are slight c. 1 1/2 inches in diameter.
Visited by OS (R L) 23 September 1966.
C1. Panel Type
In a structure |
Standing stone monument |
|
C2. Panel Dimensions, Slope & Orientation
Dimensions of panel (m to one decimal place)
Length (longer axis) |
0.8 |
Width |
0.6 |
Height (max) |
1.6 |
Height (min) |
|
Approximate slope of carved surface
Orientation (Aspect e.g. NW)
Rock Surface |
S |
Carved Surface |
S |
Carved Surface |
|
C3. Rock Surface
Surface Compactness |
Hard
|
Grain Size |
Coarse
|
Visible Anomalies |
Quartz Veins
Other
Other: Weathered garnet grains
|
Rock Type |
Gneiss
|
C4. Surface Features
C5. Panel Notes
A boulder of metamorphic rock - assumed to be orthogneiss, a metamorphosed igneous rock which is the local type. Previous records just state that this is a boulder with 15 cup marks on its uppermost surface. However the stone now is clearly a standing stone, leaning about 30 degrees from vertical, with a series of cupmarks clustering over the lower two thirds of its S face which are clustered towards the westernmost edge of the face. If the 1895 description is correct then the stone has since been upended to stand (maybe) vertically and has since slumped somewhat towards the hillside and its current form. There is a slight hollow of almost bare earth slightly above the boulder a couple of metres away, which is a roughly similar size, suggesting that this perhaps was its original location until fairly recently. Possibly it was placed in this manner to serve as a scratching post for livestock. Up to 17 cups were counted but one of these was almost certainly natural and 4 others were indistinct and must be considered as only possibles. The two largest cupmarks are about 8 x 8 x 2.5cm and 9 x 8 x 3cm. The others range from 4-6cm in diameter and <1-2cm in depth.
C6. Probability
The probability that there is any rock art on the panel is
Definite
Comments
There are an additional 4 shallow possible cupmarks
C7. MOTIFS
Cupmark
|
|
7
|
5
|
Visible Tool Marks? No
Visible Peck Marks? No
D1. Access
D2. Awareness
There are stories or folk traditions associated with this panel No
D3. Risk
Natural
Animal
Human
Comments and other potential threats
No apparent threat. Evidence of use as a horse field, although none present. Stone possibly used as a scratching post.