256:, showed that the circle was built in stages. The entire site had first been cleared, leveled and burned by setting fire to piles of willow twigs. Then came the outer stones, with their bases shaped into points to make them more stable in their gravel bed. They have been somewhat eroded over time by acidic peat eating away the lower portions of the stones. Oak and hazel were burned within the stone rings, leaving charcoal behind, and cremated human bones were deposited in the ashes within five of the rings. They were then filled with smaller stones to create the cairns visible today.
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arranged at approximately equal intervals to form a circle of 10.2 m (33 ft) diameter, enclosing the same number of small cairns. The cairns are characterised by outer kerbs or rings of stones, with a double ring surrounding the central cairn and a single ring in the others. All but one of
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At the time that the circle was built in the second millennium BC, the surrounding landscape was characterised by wet bogs, and the stones were transported to the site from higher ground some distance away. The tallest of the stones marks the north side of the circle. They vary in height from
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wrote: "The small
Circles contained in the larger present a curious singularity; and it is also remarkable that, at a short distance to the southwest, are nine others of similar dimensions." However, when the site was excavated in 1934, no trace of these satellite circles could be found.
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the cairns have eleven ringstones, with the last having nine. The whole circle sits on a patch of gravel which forms the end of a low gravel ridge linking the site with
Leuchar Moss. It is regarded as "a later development from the
432:. Society of Antiquaries of London. Sold at the house of the Society of Antiquaries, in Chancery-Lane; and by Messieurs Whiston, White, Robson Baker and Leigh, and Brown. 1829. p. 411.
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1.09 m (3.6 ft) to 1.80 m (5.9 ft). A 2004 survey of the site discovered that several of the stones had been carved with previously unnoticed
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In the Shadow of
Bennachie: A Field Archaeology of Donside, Aberdeenshire
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Excavations carried out in 1934 by H. E. Kilbride-Jones on behalf of the
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295:. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland
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379:. Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 1 January 2007. p. 71.
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Archaeologia: Or, Miscellaneous Tracts, Relating to
Antiquity
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A Guide to the Stone
Circles of Britain, Ireland and Brittany
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Diagram of the layout of
Cullerlie stone circle (Logan, 1820)
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The circle may once have had several companions. In 1820
400:Ritchie, Anna; Ritchie, James Neil Graham (1998).
185:"Cullerlie stone circle", Standing Stones of Echt
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224:. It consists of eight irregular stones of red
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350:. Aberdeenshire County Council. Archived from
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450:Buildings and structures in Aberdeenshire
323:. Yale University Press. pp. 98–99.
406:. Oxford University Press. p. 136.
403:Scotland: An Oxford Archaeological Guide
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348:"Cullerlie Stone Circle"
214:Standing Stones of Echt
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231:recumbent stone circle
210:Cullerlie stone circle
22:Cullerlie stone circle
317:Burl, Aubrey (1995).
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212:, also known as the
109:57.12892°N 2.35661°W
222:Echt, Aberdeenshire
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190:Reference no.
175:Scheduled monument
114:57.12892; -2.35661
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413:978-0-19-288002-4
386:978-0-903903-46-2
364:Internet Archive.
330:978-0-300-06331-8
254:Ministry of Works
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356:. Retrieved
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297:. Retrieved
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218:stone circle
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129:Stone circle
74:, Scotland (
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293:"Cullerlie"
261:James Logan
112: /
88:Coordinates
444:Categories
268:References
154:Site notes
148:Bronze Age
97:57°07′44″N
247:cup marks
144:Neolithic
100:2°21′24″W
80:NJ785043
68:Location
226:granite
194:SM90088
159:Website
140:Periods
135:History
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358:19 May
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299:4 May
408:ISBN
381:ISBN
360:2015
325:ISBN
301:2015
125:Type
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83:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.