Cumbria forum 41 room
Image by Chance
close

Antiquarian Chaps and Chapesses,

Click on the link below, and page down to the photos of the stone circle of Elva Plain. Does the close-up of the marked stone remind anyone of the Polissoir Stone near Avebury?

http://www.keswick.u-net.com/ldp.htm

If so, it's remarkably understated. I wonder of some of the Great Langdale stone axes were sharpened there on their way to Scotland.

Can anyone throw any light on it?

Regards,
TE.

Bloody 'ell!

wA

Cant believe that isnt already recorded somewhere. !!!

The Eternal wrote:
Antiquarian Chaps and Chapesses,

Click on the link below, and page down to the photos of the stone circle of Elva Plain. Does the close-up of the marked stone remind anyone of the Polissoir Stone near Avebury?

http://www.keswick.u-net.com/ldp.htm

If so, it's remarkably understated. I wonder of some of the Great Langdale stone axes were sharpened there on their way to Scotland.

Can anyone throw any light on it?

Regards,
TE.

Odd that it hasn't been noted before , that I know of . Could be plough marks but there are rocks that have similar markings in a secure Late Neolithic - E.B.A . setting as well as a collection of more difficult to date and called Arrow stones in Wales .

Was the surface at the bottom of the grooves spectacularly smooth, like the Avebury polisher?

Difficult to tell from a photo, but they kind of look like they might be a bit 'sharper' (deeper & narrower) than the Avebury one. Whether that makes it less likely, I dunno. The smoothness could be important tho.

love

Moth

These appear all over Ireland. Not quite as heavily used in most cases, but they're there.

http://www.megalithomania.com/show/image/1550/Currabeha.htm

http://www.megalithomania.com/show/image/2645/Annadorn.htm

(to show two that I can think of off the top of my head)

Here, they are usually interpreted as more modern marks made by people sharpening sickles and knives. The grooves are far too thin and shallow to be from stone axes.

The Eternal wrote:
Antiquarian Chaps and Chapesses,

Click on the link below, and page down to the photos of the stone circle of Elva Plain. Does the close-up of the marked stone remind anyone of the Polissoir Stone near Avebury?

http://www.keswick.u-net.com/ldp.htm

If so, it's remarkably understated. I wonder of some of the Great Langdale stone axes were sharpened there on their way to Scotland.

Can anyone throw any light on it?

Regards,
TE.

A collection here .

http://rockartuk.fotopic.net/g3953.html

Howdo Mr E.
It's an intriguing looking stone, my first impression was of a field clearance with the stone bearing plough scars, however the basin looks interesting although it could be that this area was below the reach of the plough. Hard to tell but it's worth dropping your local archaeologist a line.

I have a copy of Derbishires 1872 excavation report of the axe preparation site at Ehenside Tarn that I could send you, it includes an illustration of a grinding stone. Unfortunately I have lost your address, if you drop me a line to my name at hotmail dot com I fire it off to you along with another nice paper on shap.
cheers
fitz

Having seen the Marlborough Downs Pollisher and also the examples in Nantes Museum and Vannes Museum those stones look a lot like each other (apart from scale, but the actual pollishing areas are similar in size). This does not strike me, immediately, as a pollishing stone, as has been said, the marks are very narrow and, from a practical perspective, do not look like axe pollishing grooves.
Which leaves them being either plough marks or some other kind of rock art, something I am much less well versed in...

Don't suppose it's relevant, but thought you might be interested - here's an old note posted by Rhiannon from George Osborn's 'Ancient Wiltshire' (1982) that says there is another, possibly similar, polisher 'somewhere in England'.

http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/post/4544/fieldnotes/polisher.html

love

Moth