The cairns you see along the way were once used for supporting the coffin while the bearers took a well-earned rest. |
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It dens down in rocky cairns, under tree roots, sometimes even in the disused eyries of a golden eagle. |
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There are a few cairns, but do not rely on them, as they are widely spaced and small. |
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This menhir is surrounded by a network of enigmatic cairns and chambered warrior tombs. |
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There are hundreds of other chambered cairns and standing stones and several stone circles across the islands. |
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Elation was to glimpse limp prayer flags and rough cairns with goat horns that marked the pass. |
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The new quarry will destroy the undesignated, unforested eskers and also the burial cairns. |
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I grew up in some of the more remote parts of Scotland with undiluted access to history and myth amid standing stones, cairns, tombs and ruins. |
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Now, their pyramid-shaped middens, or mussel-shell dumps, stand along the coastline like memorial cairns. |
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Ley lines are alleged alignments of ancient sites or holy places, such as stone circles, standing stones, cairns, and churches. |
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The trail meanders across the bizarre scene with stone cairns built to mark the way. |
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Caithness is well known to archaeologists for its Neolithic chambered burial cairns. |
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Some of the many points of interest include early features such as burial mounds, stone circles and cairns that mark areas of prehistoric cultivation. |
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Ilkley Moor is one of the most significant Neolithic sites in the country with a vast collection of cairns, standing stones, circles and other sacred and ritual sites. |
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He removed thousands of stone tools from the landscape of south-eastern Australia, and in their place he erected stone cairns marking the paths of European explorers. |
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In contrast, the Le Sauvage fields remain closely associated with prehistoric cairns, and some are overlain by Rivalte-type walls, so are at least pre-Medieval. |
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My geography is the laying out of a great flatness peopled with cairns. |
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Scattered remnants and fragments of our ancient history are to be found abundantly in the North West in the form of cairns, dolmens and ring forts. |
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The artist states, in his essay, that plaques, cairns and non-sculptural markers were disqualified in favor of those that maintained the formal category of the vertical shaft. |
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In prehistoric Britain early agricultural communities deposited their dead in communal, highly visible locations such as chambered tombs, barrows and burial cairns. |
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My ribs are like a xylophone, and the knobs of my spine stick up like ponderous cairns in the landscape of my back. |
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The main visible archaeological features are in stone, notably walls, cairns and trackways, with possible remains of a few rectangular buildings and burial cairns. |
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We climbed steeply over dark rocks to two high passes and, as is the custom, placed white stones on their cairns to ask for good luck and strength. |
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Although the practice is not common in English, cairns are sometimes referred to by their anthropomorphic qualities. |
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Coastal cairns called sea marks are also common in the northern latitudes, and are placed along shores and on islands and islets. |
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In the Canadian Maritimes, cairns have been used as beacons like small lighthouses to guide boats, as depicted in the novel The Shipping News. |
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The cairns and megalithic monuments continued into the Bronze Age, which saw metals as an additional material. |
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The oldest monuments, cairns, were followed by princely tombs and stone rows. |
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There are several cairns and the remains of a circular British encampment on the mountain between Aberdare and Merthyr. |
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Although most cairns discovered in the area are round, a ring cairn or cairn circle exists on Gelli Mountain. |
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All the cairns found within the Rhondda are located on high ground, many on ridgeways, and may have been used as waypoints. |
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Over six hundred Bronze Age barrows and cairns, of various types, have been identified all over Glamorgan. |
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There are two more chambered cairns at Braeside and Huntersquoy and another on the Calf of Eday. |
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They began to come upon from time to time small cairns of rock by the roadside. They were signs in gypsy language, lost patterans. |
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The earliest signs of occupation on Gugh are two groups each, of entrance graves and Bronze Age cairns. |
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Entrance graves are either burial or ritual monuments and cairns are burial mounds. |
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There is also a cluster of nineteen cairns and a field system on the south part of Gugh along with a further two entrance graves. |
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Despite its modernity, the daymark, alongside some prehistoric cairns, is a Scheduled Ancient Monument. |
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The oldest graves consisted of wooden chambered cairns inside long barrows, but were later made in the form of passage graves and dolmens. |
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Both ends of the ridge have cairns, that at the northern end being the accepted summit. |
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The top is very flat and there are many cairns, including a pair of large windbreaks near the high point. |
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A number of large cairns have been built and an Ordnance Survey triangulation column stands nearby. |
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In many countries, cairns, as they are called in Scotland, are used as road and mountain top markers. |
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A common feature of many Pennine dales and Lake District fells are the groups of cairns on the high ground. |
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Huge burial cairns built close to the sea as far north as Harstad and also inland in the south are characteristic of this period. |
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The cairns could mark the site on which two boys lost their way on the moor and died of exposure in a snowstorm. |
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Later monuments added after the henge was built might include Bronze Age cairns as at Arbor Low. |
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The stone circles, henges, cairns and other standing stones in the area are often grouped at nodes of communication routes. |
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Nine Standards Rigg, the prominent ridge with nine ancient tall cairns, rises on the watershed at the head of Swaledale. |
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There are over 180 known cists on Dartmoor although there could be up to 100 that remain buried underneath unexplored cairns. |
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The terminals of many rows have the largest stones and other megalithic features are sometimes sited at the ends, especially burial cairns. |
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Near to the cross, along the crest of the ridge, are a series of low Bronze Age burial cairns and the remains of associated stone rows. |
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But stymied by a rockband, you are forced to traverse left instead, following cairns to gain the fire road between two large cairns. |
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There seems little agreement on when, why, or by which people such cairns were built. |
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The remains of standing stones, cairns and bridges can still be identified. |
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Lanacombe is the site of several standing stones and cairns which have been scheduled as ancient monuments. |
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A series of Bronze Age stone cairns are closely associated with the standing stones. |
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Besides cairns, the Botiala area also features a few other drystone monuments. |
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Also on the summit are the remains of two prehistoric burial cairns, one of which is the remains of the highest known passage tomb in Ireland. |
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They appear to parallel the two cairns on Slieve Gullion, which can be seen from Slieve Donard. |
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They camped on the mountaintop from late July until late November that year and used the two cairns to make triangulation points. |
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In modern times, cairns are often erected as landmarks, a use they have had since ancient times. |
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Different types of cairns exist from rough piles of stones to interlocking dry stone round cylinders. |
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Placed at regular intervals, a series of cairns can be used to indicate a path across stony or barren terrain, even across glaciers. |
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Such cairns are often placed at junctions or in places where the trail direction is not obvious. |
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This distracts from cairns used as genuine navigational guides, and also conflicts with the Leave No Trace ethic. |
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Modern cairns may also be erected for historical or memorial commemoration or simply for decorative or artistic reasons. |
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One example is a series of many cairns marking British soldiers' mass graves at the site of the Battle of Isandlwana, South Africa. |
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By contrast, cairns may have a strong aesthetic purpose, for example in the art of Andy Goldsworthy. |
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Burial cairns and other megaliths are the subject of a variety of legends and folklore throughout Britain and Ireland. |
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In Scandinavia, cairns have been used for centuries as trail and sea marks, among other purposes. |
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In the mythology of ancient Greece, cairns were associated with Hermes, the god of overland travel. |
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In South Korea cairns are quite prevalent, often found along roadsides and trails, up on mountain peaks, and adjacent to Buddhist temples. |
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Hikers frequently add stones to existing cairns trying to get just one more on top of the pile, to bring good luck. |
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In North America, cairns are often petroforms in the shapes of turtles or other animals. |
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Even today, in the Andes of South America, the Quechuan peoples use cairns as religious shrines to the indigenous Inca goddess Pachamama. |
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Circumambulating hills and cairns and performing rituals are then ways of recalling, of remembering the constant presence of the tribe through the presence of the ancestors. |
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Authoritative and beautifully illustrated, it includes data on medicine wheels, human effigy figures, cairns, tipi rings, ribstones, and other rock formations. |
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Two memorial cairns on the hill are known as Wilder Lads or Two Lads. |
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A ranger on Winter Hill constructed two cairns on the moor to commemorate the alleged tragic death of two young men on the site many hundreds of years ago. |
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There are extensive views of Coniston Water from the two cairns which Wainwright visits on the ascent, and from the track used for the return journey. |
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The documented remains include seven hut circles, five enclosures, two trackways, a field system, and some fifty cairns which probably represent field clearances. |
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All now bear cairns and a number of stone windshelters have been erected. |
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There is also a cluster of fourteen cairns which are linked by prehistoric field walls or banks but the relationship between the two is not established. |
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In locales exhibiting fantastic rock formations, such as the Grand Canyon, tourists often construct simple cairns in reverence of the larger counterparts. |
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The building of cairns for recreational purposes along trails, to mark one's personal passage through the area, can result in an overabundance of rock piles. |
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Most trail cairns are small, usually being a foot or less in height. |
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Both the cairns have been badly damaged and altered over time. |
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On 17 May 2006, a piano that had been buried under one of the cairns on the peak was uncovered by the John Muir Trust, which owns much of the mountain. |
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