Sylvias wrote:
We packed a case and set off for a short break near Keswick. We left home in fog and mist that continued for two days whilst away! On the morning of our return home the sun came out.
We called at Castlerigg to see the stone circle on our way to the hotel, the first two shots show the inclement weather. Decided to call back on the way home to take more shots for you to see in the sunshine.
The Stones of Castlerigg overlook the Thirlmere Valley with the mountains of High Seat and Helvellyn as a backdrop.
It is not just its location that makes this one of the most important British stone circles. Thought to have been constructed about 3000 BC, it is potentially one of the earliest in the country. Taken into guardianship in 1883, it was also one of the first monuments in the country to be recommended for preservation by the state.
Although there are more than 300 stone circles in Britain, the great majority of them are Bronze Age burial monuments (dating from about 2000–800 BC) containing cremations in central pits or beneath small central cairns. Castlerigg does not contain formal burials.
The Neolithic stone circles also differ from those of the later Bronze Age in their generally larger size and often flattened circular shape – as is found at Castlerigg – comprising an open circle of many large stones. Castlerigg is about 97½ ft (30 metres) in diameter, and formerly comprised 42 stones. There are now only 38 stones, which vary in height from 3¼ ft (1 metre) to 7½ ft (2.3 metres).
Canon 650D, 10-18 lens
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We packed a case and set off for a short break nea... (
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