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Archaeology Notes

Event ID 650137

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Archaeology Notes

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/650137

NC71SE 2 778 100.

(A - NC 7786 1007 : B - NC 7785 1005) Cairns (NR)

OS 6"map, (1969)

From a cist within a large cairn known as Sciber's Grave on the farm of Sciberscross, cam a bronze, or brass brooch with traces of gilding. The earliest form of the farm name is Siberscaig. The brooch is in Dunrobin Museum, donated by the late Mr Hall several years before 1882.

J A Smith 1882.

On a slight eminence in a meadow is a cairn (A) 33ft in diameter and now 4ft high. The upper part has been removed and a cist exposed, of which the cap-stone, 4ft 4ins by 2ft 9ins, the ends and one side remain. It lies WSW-ENE and is 3ft 7ins inside length. The cairn is outlined by large contiguous boulders 1 1/2 - 2ft in length.

Some 30ft to the E is another cairn (B) which has been excavated and the cist displaced. It is 30ft 9 ins in diameter and about 4ft high. Around the base is a setting of large but not contiguous boulders.

A further probable cairn occurs 20ft N of cairn 'A'. It survives as a mound, about 5ft high and 19ft in diameter, from the slope of which some large stones protrude.

Some 40yds from cairn 'A' is a natural mound with a cairn surmounting it. The cairn measures 27ft in diameter with an outline of contiguous boulders. It appears to have been excavated but no cist is visible.

RCAHMS 1911, visited 1909.

There are three, turf-covered cairns (A-C) the last, at NC 7781 1002, being the one some 40 yards from cairn 'A'; they occupy individual knolls in an early/modern field and are generally as described. The cavity of the cist in cairn 'A' is barely visible, being concealed by the cover-stone; the cairn is known locally as St Sciber's Grave. Where the centre of caian 'B' has been excavated only rubble core is to be seen. Cairn 'C' has been badly robbed and only in the E quadrant, where it stands to about 1.0m maximum, is there much of the infill remaining; odd stones show in the periphery and one or two are undoubtedly of a bounding kerb; there are no traces of a cist.

The supposed cairn 20ft N of cairn 'A' is merely a natural hump with some fortuitously placed stones and boulders; two of the boulders are disproportionately large for a cairn. A bronze diamond-shaped brooch from Sciberscross is in the Dunrobin Museum. Case No 540, No. 9.

Cairn 'C' surveyed at 1:10,560.

Visited by OS (J M) 25 May 1976.

This bronze brooch is in Dunrobin Museum. Acc No x 107

Information from Ms Catalogue of Dunrobin Museum by A S Henshall.

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