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Blackshaw
Cup And Ring Marked Rock (Neolithic) - (Bronze Age)
Site Name Blackshaw
Classification Cup And Ring Marked Rock (Neolithic) - (Bronze Age)
Alternative Name(s) Blackshaw Quarry
Canmore ID 41006
Site Number NS24NW 19
NGR NS 23111 48338
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/41006
- Council North Ayrshire
- Parish West Kilbride
- Former Region Strathclyde
- Former District Cunninghame
- Former County Ayrshire
NS24NW 19 2310 4834.
(NS 2310 4834) Cup and Ring marked Rock (NR)
OS 6" map (1970)
This area of rock, measuring 45ft in length by 19ft broad at one end, and 3ft broad at the other, is sculptured with over 300 cup marks, and a variety of cup-and-rings, spirals, and other marks.
Parts of shale rings were found by Boyd when cleaning soil from crevices in the rock. Two-thirds of one ring, measuring 5 1/2ins in external diameter and 5/8ins thick, with a perforation 1 1/2ins in diameter, was donated by him to the NMAS (Acc. No. FN 155).
D Boyd and J Smith 1887; Proc Soc Antiq Scot 1927
Only the eastern portion, measuring 5.2m E-W by 3.2m N-S, of this cup and ring marked rock is now visible, the remainder being turf-covered. On the exposed part are several cup marks, two being connected by a groove, and three ring marks, which though much weathered are still identifiable.
Visited by OS (DS) 7 September 1956
Parts of this rock are still turf-covered.
R W B Morris and D C Bailey 1967
Since the last reports this much weathered rock has been fenced off and de-turfed, so that its appearance and dimensions are roughly as stated; only some detail along the southern strip of the rock remains obscured. Adjacent to the SE limit of this rock, on the other side of a field wall, is another flat rock surface (exposed area roughly 5 by 2m) bearing at least two cup marks, 3 to 5 cms in diameter.
Resurveyed at 1:2500.
Visited by OS (JRL) 10 November 1982
Field Visit (10 September 1942)
This site was included within the RCAHMS Emergency Survey (1942-3), an unpublished rescue project. Site descriptions, organised by county, vary from short notes to lengthy and full descriptions and are available to view online with contemporary sketches and photographs. The original typescripts, manuscripts, notebooks and photographs can also be consulted in the RCAHMS Search Room.
Information from RCAHMS (GFG) 10 December 2014.
Desk Based Assessment (November 2014 - March 2015)
A desk-based assessment and reconnaissance field survey have been carried out for the Proposed Development Site. Seventeen cultural heritage assets (sites and features) have been identified within the Proposed Development Site. These range in date from the early prehistoric (Neolithic/Bronze Age) to the post-medieval period and include a well-preserved cup and ring marked rock, which is a Scheduled Monument, several prehistoric artefact find-spots, a possible prehistoric enclosure and later post-medieval settlement and agrarian activity.
Funder: Community Windpower Ltd.
CFA Archaeology Ltd
OASIS ID: cfaarcha1-260699
Field Visit (10 November 2014 - 1 March 2015)
The Inventory of Scheduled Monuments (Historic Scotland 2014) records that this monument comprises a flat outcrop of rock, decorated with cup and ring markings. The decoration on the rock includes about 300 cups, 40 half cups, 27 cups with one ring, 11 cups with two rings, 3 cups with three rings and 3 spirals. Some rings are gapped, with a radial groove from the cup. The greatest ring diameters and the greatest depth of carving are 28 cm and 5 cm respectively. It is one of the most complex and one of the best preserved cup and ring marked rocks in southwest Scotland.
Canmore and the HER record that the rock has been fenced-off and de-turfed. It measures 5.2 m east to west and 3.2 m north to south. Adjacent to the southeast limit of the rock, on the other side of a field wall, is another flat rock surface (exposed area roughly 5 m by 2 m) bearing at least two cup marks.
Boyd and Smith (1887) records that parts of shale rings were found when cleaning soil from crevices in the rock in the 19th century.
Field survey for this assessment, identified the cup and ring marked rock which is located in an area of grassland on the edge of forestry. The main part of the bedrock outcrop is located to the north of a stone built field wall. There was no evidence for any fence surrounding the rock as noted by Canmore (see above). The cup and ring marks were still visible, although some moss cover has started to grow on the rock. The bedrock outcrop noted to the south of the field wall by the HER and Canmore (see above) has been subsumed by grass, and the cup marks previously recorded are no longer visible.
Information from OASIS ID: cfaarcha1-260699 (M Hastie) 2015
Note (16 April 2021)
Date Fieldwork Started: 16/04/2021
Compiled by: ACFA West Glasgow
Location Notes: The panel is situated on a hillside with a SE aspect beside a stone dyke which runs from the NE to the SW. The panel is reported to continue under the dyke to the SE but is currently covered with turf. A track runs along the opposite side of the dyke from the panel. The panel lies within an area of rough grass but is surrounded by several conifer plantations with new planting taking place. It is possible that the Firth of Clyde and Arran were visible to the west but there is a forestry plantation in the way today. The panel is situated approximately 200m N of an enclosure marked on the OS map (Canmore ID 41010). A cup and ring marked stone (Canmore ID 41022), currently in the Hunterian Museum, was found 30m ESE of the panel.
Panel Notes: The exposed area of the panel exposed measures 11.8 x 5.6m and is flush with the surrounding grass. Its long axis lies NE-SW. It is made of sandstone and there are quartz pebbles included in it. There are numerous fissures which appear to have been used to demarcate the areas of rock art. The panel is heavily eroded. There are 12 cups with 1 ring, 3 cups with partial rings, 6 cups with 2 rings, 3 spirals and 154 cupmarks (one with a radial) visible on the 3D models. A radial from a cupmark joins at right angles to a radial from a cup with 2 partial rings. The 3 spirals are on a sloping piece of rock unlike the other motifs. They are not normally visible in daylight but appeared clearly in the 3D model.
3D models were built for the areas of the panel that were depicted in figures 10 to 26 of Smith's 1895 book, as well as for the entire panel, which was depicted in the plan by Smith in Boyd and Smith (1887). Comparison of the original plan and individual figures with the 3D models show both the accuracy of the plan and figures, and also how much has been lost through weathering in the last 134 or so years. Most of the radials and a large number of rings and cups recorded by Smith are no longer visible. In particular, the motifs in figures 21, 23 and 25 are no longer visible. Some of the 'hoof-markings' mentioned by Smith are still visible but it is unclear now if they were designed as such.
References
Boyd, D.A. and Smith, J. (1887) 'Notice of a rock surface with cup-marks and other sculpturings, at Blackshaw, West Kilbride, Ayrshire', Proc Soc Antiq Scot, vol. 21, 1886-7. Page(s) 143-151
Smith, J. (1895) Prehistoric Man in Ayrshire