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Field Visit
Date 7 September 1992
Event ID 925401
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/925401
NY 2501 9935 to 2519 9997 NY29NE 75
(Formerly classified as cursiform earthwork). The remains of this bank barrow are situated on the SSW flank of Lamb Knowe, a ridge which lies between the Rae and the Moodlaw burns, and descend unevenly towards the River White Esk on the SSW.
For most of its surviving length of about 650m, the earthwork comprises a central mound, measuring up to 6.2m in thickness and 0.5m in height, accompanied by a ditch on either side. The ditches measure up to 3.8m in breadth and 0.3m in depth, and are separated from the mound by a flat berm up to 3.2m wide. At its NNE end, the central mound narrows slightly and runs up on to the side of a barrow-like terminal without actually reaching the flat top. This barrow-like terminal is roughly oval on plan and measures about 9.7m from NE to SW by 8m and 1.5m in height. The ditches return around the NE end of the mound and unite in the form of a hairpin. At its SSW end the earthwork has been levelled by cultivation, and it is not now possible to estimate where the monument originally ended.
It is likely, however, that this earthwork and another (NY29NE 102) of similar description on the opposite side of the valley, are actually two ends of the same monument, and that it is only the central section that is missing, having been obliterated by modern agriculture and by erosion to the river terraces of the River White Esk.
Visited by RCAHMS (JRS) 7 September 1992.
Listed among 'cursus monuments and bank barrows; name cited as Lamb Knowe, Raeburnfoot
RCAHMS 1997.