Cup & Ring art at Tod Crag - near Harwood Forest, Northeast England
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
Assisted by: Groundspeak Premium Member broadoak2006
N 55° 11.824 W 002° 02.616
30U E 560878 N 6117138
The purpose of these petroglyphs are debated as to whether they were of religious significance or toolmaking.
Waymark Code: WMM1FA
Location: North East England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 07/02/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Patudles
Views: 3
Created From:
 Tod Crag (Cup & Ring) - posted by broadoak2006

"Precisely dating megalithic art is difficult: even if the megalithic monument can be dated, the art may be a later addition. The Hunterheugh Crags cup and ring marks near Alnwick in Northumberland have recently been demonstrated to date back into the Early Neolithic era through their stratigraphic relationship with other, datable features. Some cup marks have been found in Iron age contexts but these may represent re-used stones.

Where they are etched onto natural, flat stone it has been observed that they seem to incorporate the natural surface of the rock. Those at Hunterheugh are mostly connected to one another by gutters that can channel rainwater from one to the next, down the sloping top of the stone. It has been suggested by archaeologist Clive Waddington that the initial Early Neolithic impetus to create the marks was forgotten and that the practice fell into abeyance until a second phase of creation continued the basic tradition but with less precision and more variability in design. The markers of this second phase moved the art from natural stones to megaliths as its symbolism was reinterpreted by Later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age people.

Their purpose is unknown although some may be connected with natural stone outcrops exploited by Neolithic peoples to make polished stone axes. A religious purpose has been suggested. Alexander Thom suggested in a BBC television documentary, Cracking the Stone Age Code, in 1970, "I have an idea, entirely nebulous at the moment, that the cup and ring markings were a method of recording, of writing, and that they may indicate, once we can read them, what a particular stone was for. We have seen the cup and ring markings on the stone at Temple Wood, and that's on the main stone but we can't interpret them ...yet." He created diagrams and carried out analysis of over 50 of the cup and ring markings from which he determined a length he termed the Megalithic Inch (MI). This whole idea has been ignored almost completely apart from a critical analysis carried out by Alan Davies in the 1980s, who covered only English sites with cup and ring marks. He suggested "strongest indications...towards the use of a quantum close in value to 5 MI at certain sites" and that "the apparent quantum seems strongly associated with ringed cups." Davies made an initial effort to build on Thom's start, and to answer the question he posed: "Why should a man spend hours – or rather days – cutting cups in a random fashion on a rock? It would indeed be a breakthrough if someone could crack the code of the cups."" (from (visit link) )

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Type of Pictograph: Petroglyph

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