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SaCraba.
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Pietra dell'equinozio del complesso megalitico di Loughcrew ('na Caillighe Sliabh', Montagna della "Strega"). Irlanda
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dueruote79.
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Complimenti Craby x il post, sorprendente e molto utile x il lavoro del GRS . -
pietrusco.
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NOTARE la bellissima ARRODA 'E TEMPUS in cui si specchia il sole all'equinozio... RUOTA A 8 PARTI, CALENDARIO SHARDANA/TUATHA DE DANA... la prima foto in alto. . -
SaCraba.
User deleted
CITAZIONE (dueruote79 @ 5/7/2010, 00:17)Complimenti Craby
grazie Dueruote
visto che questo topic riguarda l'Irlanda approfitto per inserire qualche altra incisione rupestre,pił avanti anche qualche planimetria di tombe megalitiche irlandesi
Dingle Peninsula, Aghacarrible
www.europreart.net/cgi-bin/baserun....record&_act=355
www.europreart.net/cgi-bin/baserun....r=_pix&_nfoto=1
Dingle Peninsula, Loughadoon
www.europreart.net/cgi-bin/baserun....record&_act=384
Edited by SaCraba - 10/7/2010, 00:08. -
SaCraba.
User deleted
Cloverhill, county Sligo: Tomb Carrowmore 30A
This little (now-roofless) tomb on the finge of the Carrowmore complex is something of a puzzle,
since the designs on the right-hand stone are unlike any others in passage-tombs.
It is, moreover, the only decorated tomb in the county.
The engravings on the right-hand stone are very much in the elegant, curvilinear, Celtic 'La Tčne' style
of up to two thousand years later than the Carrowmore megaliths, and have none of the characteristic motifs of passage-tombs.
The left-hand stone bears, however, a classic design of both megalithic and petroglyphic 'art':
the ring of cup-marks surrounding a cup-mark, and here surrounded by incomplete rings.
Some authorities accept it as part of the Irish passage-tomb series, and others do not.
Perhaps the decoration of this tomb was added to, for whatever reason, in Celtic times ?
www.irishmegaliths.org.uk/zCloverhill.htm
Carrowmore
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrowmore. -
SaCraba.
User deleted
planimetrie delle court tombs (tombe corte) irlandesi:
double court tomb at Ballywholan
www.irishmegaliths.org.uk/seanchlocha1.htm
www.ballybegvillage.com/tombs.html
Court-Cairn Tomb at Abbeyderg
www.askaboutireland.ie/reading-room...-tomb-at-abbey/
Edited by SaCraba - 10/7/2010, 14:43. -
SaCraba.
User deleted
CITAZIONECreggandevesky
This very impressive court tomb was a peat-covered, largely featureless mound and was threatened with removal in an agricultural reclamation scheme. It was excavated between 1979 and 1982, shown to be of great interest, and reprieved.
A semicircular forecourt at the SE end leads through a portal with a massive lintel, into the burial gallery which is subdivided into 3 chambers in a short trapezoidal cairn. The cairn's drystone side revetment walls still stand to some height and some of the corbel stones of the roof are still in place.
Cremated bone representing the remains of 21 people, flint implements and Neolithic pottery were found during the excavation, some of the material in the court area. Radiocarbon determinations suggest a date of about 3500 BC, placing it in the Neolithic period, but there were also signs of later, Bronze Age, activity in the court and at the back of the cairn.
http://www.ni-environment.gov.uk/built-hom...es_to_visit.htm
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