Accessibility

Font Size

100% 150% 200%

Background Colour

Default Contrast
Close Reset

Scheduled Maintenance


Please be advised that this website will undergo scheduled maintenance on the following dates: •

Tuesday 3rd December 11:00-15:00

During these times, some services may be temporarily unavailable. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

 

 

 

Field Visit

Date 30 March 2004

Event ID 635269

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/635269

This recumbent stone circle is situated in a grass-grown clearing amongst the conifers of Loudon Wood. It now comprises the recumbent setting and only four orthostats, two of which are fallen (4 & 7), set around the southern half of an oval ring-bank measuring 23m from ESE to WNW by about 20m transversely overall; formerly there were probably another three or four stones around the N. The orthostats evidently stood along the inner edge of the ring-bank and the circle itself measures only 19.6m by about 17.5m overall. The recumbent (2), which lies on the SSW, measures 3.2m in length by up to 1.15m in height and a stone sleeper can be seen beneath the back of its W end. The relatively even summit of the recumbent dips at its W end towards the adjacent flanker, and a possible cupmark can be seen a little W of its highest point. The W flanker (1) stands some 2.2m in height and arcs over the W end of the recumbent, while its fallen pair on the E (3) is evidently of similar size and shape. The foot of the W flanker is roughly aligned with the front of the recumbent to extend the long axis of the setting. Despite the fallen and missing stones, the heights of the orthostats appear to have been graded, with the tallest occurring on the S. The stony ring-bank in which the orthostats stand measures up to 3.5m in thickness by 0.4m in height, and the tops of a row of kerbstones can be seen protruding through its crest immediately E of the fallen E flanker. In its present form the ring-bank is more substantial than is usually found in Buchan rings (eg Aikey Brae, No. 1), but it is likely that these stones belong to the outer kerb, which was subsequently encased within a thicker bank when the interior was dug out to provide the stance for a later timber round-house. Evidence of this later occupation is provided by a shallow ring-ditch measuring about 13.5m in diameter, which lies concentrically within the bank (cf Strichen House, No. 62); its entrance is probably on the SW at a heavily degraded sector of the ring-bank immediately W of the recumbent setting.

Visited by RCAHMS (ATW and KHJM) 30 March 2004

People and Organisations

References