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Glen Lochay

Cup Marked Rock (Neolithic) - (Bronze Age)

Site Name Glen Lochay

Classification Cup Marked Rock (Neolithic) - (Bronze Age)

Alternative Name(s) Duncroisk 3

Canmore ID 24169

Site Number NN53NW 16

NGR NN 5313 3584

NGR Description NN c. 5313 3584

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/24169

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council Stirling
  • Parish Killin
  • Former Region Central
  • Former District Stirling
  • Former County Perthshire

Archaeology Notes

NN53NW 16 c. 5313 3584

About 9.0m SE of an elbow of the River Lochay and 20.0m below where the burn at the keeper's cottage joins the river is a schist shelf 9.0m by 4.5m bearing two cup and ring marks.

E A Cormack 1952; R W B Morris TS 1975

From the descriptions given this rock would seem to be at NN 5313 3584. No cup marks were found on this rock, however.

Visited by OS (BS), 10 September 1975

Activities

Note (1979)

Duncroisk 3 NN 531 358 NN53NW 16

A rock outcrop bearing cup-and-ring marks.

RCAHMS 1979

Cormack 1950, 172.

Field Visit (2012)

Further survey work was carried out on Corrycharmaig (NN 527 358), Duncroisk (NN 530 363), Easter Tullich (NN 526 367) and Tirai (NN 529 367). Of greatest significance over the past year was the discovery, during archival research, of three 17th-century references to a Croftravie or Croftrevie, listed between Innischoarach (NN 493 367) and Corrycharmaig Farms. In 1634–35 Jon and Donald McInnes, the latter a shepherd, lived there, but by 1688, two McGrigors, Jon and Duncan, were in residence. No other references to Croftravie have been found to date.

Intensive fieldwork, carried out on Corrycharmaig from March to May 2012, discovered the presence, in the oak woods bounding the S banks of the River Lochay, of a small cluster of dry stone structures including a house and outbuildings (NN 5122 3661). It is a possibility that these remains are those of Croftravie. The other findings from the survey comprise shieling-type huts, field systems and several dry stone buildings, one of which is extant to 2.9m high (NN 5141 3649).

On Duncroisk, a survey of a small group of shieling huts above the old head dyke was undertaken (NN 5381 3654). An area of improved ground (NN 5359 3756) immediately below an improvement dyke was also surveyed, including several dry stone and turf buildings and the remains of activities from the Breadalbane Hydro-electric Project of the 1950s.

An update on ACFA’s initial survey in Glen Lochay on Tirai and Easter Tullich is underway. Archaeological features that were noted above an improvement dyke in the early 1990s have been drawn and fieldwalking above the old head dyke is nearing completion. Here, a small group of five shieling huts were recorded in October (NN 5297 3734).

Three ACFA Occasional Papers have been published this year: Tomochrocher, Batavaime and Tuerichan, the latter a former farm now subsumed within Corrycharmaig.

Archive: ACFA Occasional Papers are deposited with RCAHMS and the Stirling and Clackmannanshire SMR

Dugald MacInnes, Association of Certificated Field Archaeologists (ACFA)

2012

References

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