Pricing Change
New pricing for orders of material from this site will come into place shortly. Charges for supply of digital images, digitisation on demand, prints and licensing will be altered.
Upcoming Maintenance
Please be advised that this website will undergo scheduled maintenance on the following dates:
Thursday, 9 January: 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Thursday, 23 January: 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Thursday, 30 January: 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM
During these times, some functionality such as image purchasing may be temporarily unavailable. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.
Canna, Beinn Tighe
Field System (Period Unassigned), Lazy Beds (Post Medieval)
Site Name Canna, Beinn Tighe
Classification Field System (Period Unassigned), Lazy Beds (Post Medieval)
Alternative Name(s) A' Chill
Canmore ID 142444
Site Number NG20NE 109.01
NGR NG 2538 0574
NGR Description NG 2499 0549 to NG 2538 0574
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/142444
- Council Highland
- Parish Small Isles
- Former Region Highland
- Former District Lochaber
- Former County Inverness-shire
NG20NE 109.01 2499 0549 to 2538 0574
This subdivision takes in a narrow strip of ground between the boundary with the farm of ?Tarbet? (Tarbert) to the W and the gully of an unnamed burn to the E, and stops on the upper edge of the S cliffs overlooking NG20NE 109.04. The burn gully runs roughly from NNE to SSW across the island between Beinn Tighe and Blar Beinn Tighe and is followed for much of its length by a ruinous turf-and-stone wall; the latter acts as a physical boundary between this and NG20NE 109.02 and may be an earlier land boundary subsumed within the farm of ?Keill? (A? Chill).
Several small plots of lazy-beds (NG20NE 97-100) survive within this subdivision, three of which lie on a terrace surrounded by four groups of huts. Another broader terrace lies above this and here the ground is extremely boggy, but stretches of an orthostatic wall can be traced running from E to W towards the rear of the terrace, and may originally have linked with another old wall that converges with the march dyke from SSW to NNE. These walls are similar in form to those recorded as field-systems at the W end of Canna, some of which are associated with hut-circles and may be prehistoric in origin. No cultivated ground is shown in this subdivision on the 1805 estate map, and the ground is annotated as pasture.
Visited by RCAHMS (ARG), 24 November 1997.