370 



feet in height of the small stones which composed it remain. Four 

 large stones outside this cairn mark an avenue, pointing due east, of 

 16 yards long, 7 yards wide at the entrance, and diminishing to 4 

 yards wide as it approaches the cairn. One stone stands upwards of 

 six feet above the surface. 



0. 



In the valley below the two knolls, 352 yards 1ST. E. from M, and 

 279 yards W. from N, are the remains of a cairn, 1 1 yards in dia- 

 meter. Three large prostrate stones, each measuring about 4x3 feet, 

 mark the site. One upright stone, 3 feet 9 inches high, 3 feet 9 inches 

 broad, and about 1 foot thick, is still standing, apparently in the cir- 

 cumference of the original cairn. On its western face, arranged prin- 

 cipally in four groups, are 28 cups, varying from a half to three 

 quarters of an inch in diameter, and about a quarter of an inch deep. 

 Probably these may have been intended to represent some of the con- 

 stellations. 



P 1 . 



143 yards IN". E. from 1ST. are the remains of a cairn, eight yards in 

 diameter. Sufficient stones only remain to denote the original basis of 

 the cairn. 



P 2 . 



About 22 yards northwards are six large stones, probabfy the re- 

 mains of another cairn. One of these stones, 6 feet 6 inches long, 

 5 feet 6 inches broad, and about 2 feet thick, rests at present in an 

 inclining position, and has its eastern face thickly covered with small 

 cup-like hollows; but, as these may possibly have been created by the 

 action of rain water, I do not think it right to take further notice of 

 them. 



Q. 



Thirty- eight yards northward from P 2 are the remains of another 

 cairn, four and a half yards in diameter. Nearly all the stones which 

 composed it have been carried away. 



E 1 . 



Passing up the hill in an easterly direction, and at a distance of 242 

 yards from Q, we come to the remains of a cairn, eleven yards in dia- 

 meter. All that now remains of the original pile varies from two to 

 three feet in height. 



E 2 . 



Sixteen yards to the south of E l , and fifty-five yards S. "W". from T, 

 are the remains of another cairn, nine yards in diameter, and about two 

 feet in height. Ten of the stones forming its circular boundary still 

 remain; and outside the cairn, at a distance of from three to four 

 yards, lie five large stones. 



