The Callanish VIII stone setting is one of many megalithic structures around the better-known (and larger) Calanais I on the west coast of the Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides (Western Isles), Scotland. It is also known locally as Tursachan.[1]
This is a very unusual (and possibly unique) setting, with a semicircle of four large stones on the edge of a cliff on the south of the island of Great Bernera and looking across a narrow strait to Lewis. There is no evidence that the cliff has collapsed here and destroyed half of a complete circle – it would appear that a semicircle was the original intention. The tallest stone is nearly three metres high and the cliff-edge axis of the circle gives a diameter of about 20 metres.
Footnotes
- ^ "Great Bernera, 'Tursachan', Barraglom"[permanent dead link] RCAHMS. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
External links
58°12′21″N 6°49′47″W / 58.20583°N 6.82972°W / 58.20583; -6.82972
Prehistoric Western Isles | |
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Callanish Sites | |
Other Neolithic Sites | |
Bronze and Iron Age Sites |
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