Boulder found on Reaveley Hill, to the NW of Ingram, Northumberland.
This stone was first recorded on the county Historic Environment Record and was added to ERA by NADRAP in 2008 as ‘Reaveley Hill’. The NADRAP team noted:
“This boulder is set in a small clearance cairn, is flat on top but dips steeply to ground level on the north east side. It is largely covered with turf and moss. The motifs consist of one good cup with a 0.07 m diameter and 0.02 m depth and several other irregular shaped depressions, which could possibly be natural.”
A larger scheduled cairnfield containing some 40+ cairns (believed Bronze Age) is some 900 metres SW.
ERA record: https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/era/section/panel/overview.jsf?eraId=778
This model is created from 4 images captured by NADRAP Team 2 in January 2008. The imagery forms part of the NADRAP / ERA archive.
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