Whalsay, Brough, Houll
Cup Marked Rock (Prehistoric)
Site Name Whalsay, Brough, Houll
Classification Cup Marked Rock (Prehistoric)
Canmore ID 1321
Site Number HU56SE 10
NGR HU 5560 6487
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/1321
- Council Shetland Islands
- Parish Nesting
- Former Region Shetland Islands Area
- Former District Shetland
- Former County Shetland
HU56SE 10 5560 6487.
(Area: HU 555 648) Three groups of cup-marks occur on the tops of rocky outcrops about 250 yards S. of No. 1343 (HU56NE 12 - broch site) on the east side of the road and about 80 yards SW of Houll, and another group at a place called 'The Steep Toons', east of Houll. The cups are pecked out, not ground.
RCAHMS 1946, visited 1936.
Centred HU 5560 6487, on a SE facing slope, there are four areas of cup-marked rock outcrop. A - 3 cups, B - 3, C - at least 19, and D - at least 6.
Surveyed at 1/2500.
Visited by OS (RL) 23 May 1968.
Field Visit (29 May 1936)
Cup-marked Rocks, Brough.
Cup markings occur in three places near the township of Brough.
(1) [HU56NE 14] There are two groups on exposed surfaces of living rock on the E. side of the hillock, noted as a broch site [HU56NE 12 - broch site] at the N. end of the township. The upper group consists of ten much weathered cups measuring about 2 in. in average diameter and sometimes as much as 1 in. deep, spread over an area of some 18 ft. by 16 ft. The lower group comprises at least nineteen cups, spread over an area of 18 ft. by 10 ft. The cups here are from 2 ½ in. to 3 ½ in. in diameter and from 1 in. to 2 in. deep. Three of them are connected by a slight hollowing of the stone between, which gives them the appearance of a trefoil (Fig. 555 [SH 18]). One isolated cup was found some 70 yds. S. of these.
(2) [HU56SE 10] About 250 yds. S. of No. 1343, on. the E. side of the road and about 80 yds. S.W. of Houll, are three other groups on the tops of rocky outcrops. One group consists of six cups; another, some 6 ft. to the N.E., of four; and another, 35 ft. to the S., of two.
(3) A further group, situated at a place called the Steep Toons, east of Houll, was reported by a local observer, Mr. J. Stewart, after the date of visit.
The cups of all three groups are generally similar, as all are pecked out and not ground; they also seem to be similar in workmanship to those which are found on detached stones and water-worn boulders at the sites of certain brochs and other structures. They differ from these, however, in the fact that they, like many Bronze Age cup-markings, are spread over areas of living rock.
RCAHMS 1946, visited 29 May 1936.