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Archaeology Notes
Event ID 669575
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Archaeology Notes
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/669575
NJ71NE 14 7839 1797.
For stone circles at Broomend of Crichie (NJ 7792 1967), Cairnhall (NJ 7850 1759), Hill of Tuack (NJ 7957 1544) and Castle Hill, Kintore (NJ 7939 1634), see NJ71NE 6, NJ71NE 17, NJ71NE 27, NJ71NE 32.00 respectively.
(NJ 783 91797) Stone Circle (NR) (Remains of)
OS 6" map, (1938)
The stone circle consists of a low central mound, a vaguely-defined ditch, and an equally vague enclosing ridge, upon which, on the SW, stands a single stone, about 6 feet (1.8m) high. Originally there must have been 7 stones.
An oriented grave 5 feet (1.52m) long by 2 feet (0.6m) wide by 2 feet 3 inches (0.69m) deep, containing an unburnt skeleton and a cremated burial with Bronze Age urn fragments, was found at the centre of a fire-marked area 9 feet (2.74m) in diameter, just below the surface at the centre of the stone circle. Seven deposits of burnt bones, some in small circular cists, were found around this central burial. Fragments of Bronze Age urns were found with some of the burials.
Some of the urn fragments and bones are in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland (NMAS).
F R Coles 1901.
The circle had been about 28 feet (8.5m) in diameter, and probably consisted of six or seven stones.
J Anderson 1886.
The thirteen sherds in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland (NMAS) are from thirteen Early Iron Age vessels, showing that, although erected in the Bronze Age (on analogies with the Broomend of Crichie circle - NJ71NE 6) it continued in use into the Iron Age.
H E Kilbride-Jones 1935.
A similar site excavated by Canon Greenwell at Ford in Northumberland was found to be a barrow containing a circle of stones, and Bronze Age burials.
W D Simpson 1957.
This feature now planted with trees is as described by Anderson (1886) and resembles a saucer barrow in appearance. A low stone wall revetment of the outer edge of the circle is probably comparatively modern.
Surveyed at 1/2500.
Visited by OS (RD) 18 March 1964.
Air photographs: CUCAP AKD 18-19, flown 23 July 1964.
NMRS, MS/712/67.
All that remains of this stone circle is a single erect stone on the S side of a small copse of trees about 400m SE of Fullerton farmsteading (NJ71NE 228). The granite block, which measures 0.9m in breadth by 0.8m in thickness at ground-level and 1.95m in height, has been incorporated into a circular plantation bank 2.5m in thickness and 0.3m in height. The interior of the plantation enclosure, which measures 16.3m in internal diameter, is choked with field-cleared stones.
The accession number of the pottery found here and donated to the then National Museum of Antiquities in 1856 is RMS: EP 22.
Visited by RCAHMS (JRS, ATW), 22 November 1996.