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Following the launch of trove.scot in February 2025 we are now planning the retiral of some of our webservices. Canmore will be switched off on 24th June 2025. Information about the closure can be found on the HES website: Retiral of HES web services | Historic Environment Scotland

Field Visit

Date June 1979

Event ID 1102572

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1102572

This unusual dun occupies the summit of a rocky knoll which lies at the NE end of a steep-sided ridge known as Creag Mhor, about l.5km SW of Ardnoe Point. The surrounding area has been afforested, but the dun may be approached from the NE along a Forest Trail Campbell and Sandeman 1964).

Irregular on plan, the dun measures 18m by 14m within a wall which can be traced with ease on all sides except the NW. The wall shows considerable variation in thickness, ranging from 3.8m on the SW to as little as 1.6m, and there is a marked thickening on the W side of the entrance-passage. Where best preserved, on the WSW, the outer face rises to a height of 2.6m in fourteen courses with a pronounced inward batter, but elsewhere it has been reduced to its basal course. In general, the inner face is not as well preserved as the outer face, and for much of its course its lower portion is obscured by debris. On the SW there is a straight-joint visible in the outer face, which rises vertically from the foundation course to the top of the surviving masonry, and appears to run through the body of the wall to join the inner face. The sizes of the stones used in the basal course of the outer face differ on each side of the joint, and the SE section is stepped in from the line of the wall on the NW side, which all points to the joint being the junction between two phases of wall-building, and suggests that the wall may have been constructed by different work-gangs.

Along the E side an extra skin was added to the inner face of the wall, and it is pierced at two points by open chambers, the back walls of which are formed by the inner face of the outer wall. A large slab at the NE end of the N chamber may be the lowest course of a corbelled roof; in the same chamber, on the S wall, there is a small aumbry. At the SE angle of the dun wall there is a further chamber; it has been built partly within the thickness of the dun wall, but its NE side is formed by the extra skin on the E wall. There is little doubt that the thickening of the E wall is an original feature and contemporary with the construction of the dun as a whole, and it may have served as the base for a stairway, which rose from a little to the E of the entrance to reach the wall-head above the SE chamber.

The well-preserved entrance lies on the NNE; originally it measured 2.1m across, unusually broad for an entrance-passage, but it was subsequently reduced to a width of 1m by a stretch of inferior walling attached to the W side of the passage. The narrowing of the entrance may have occurred in antiquity, but the possibility remains that it may be contemporary with a stretch of more recent walling which lies adjacent to the inner face of the dun wall on the NE. Apart from an outcrop of rock on the N, the interior of the dun is featureless.

RCAHMS 1988, visited June 1979.

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