This site is entirely user-supported. See how you can help.
We don't have any photos of this monument yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
If Google Street View is available, the image is from the best available vantage point looking, if possible, towards the location of the monument. Where it is not available, the satellite view is shown instead.
Latitude: 53.3228 / 53°19'22"N
Longitude: -1.696 / 1°41'45"W
OS Eastings: 420346.110875
OS Northings: 380699.725033
OS Grid: SK203806
Mapcode National: GBR JZL0.MK
Mapcode Global: WHCCM.XRK0
Entry Name: Cairnfield 870m north east of Lane End Farm
Scheduled Date: 29 October 1999
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1020362
English Heritage Legacy ID: 31253
County: Derbyshire
Civil Parish: Offerton
Traditional County: Derbyshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Derbyshire
Church of England Parish: Hathersage St Michael and All Angels
Church of England Diocese: Derby
The monument includes a discrete group of at least five cairns forming a
small cairnfield, interpreted as prehistoric land clearance for settlement and
agriculture. The cairnfield occupies a small, relatively well drained,
location standing on a bluff of open moorland directly overlooking a brook,
the Siney Sitch. It forms part of a larger area of prehistoric settlement and
agriculture on the same moorland, separated from other similar remains by
areas of uncleared or boggy ground. There are between five and eight cairns,
ranging from approximately 2m to 4.5m in diameter. Some of the cairns are
slightly ovoid in shape, indicating that they may once have formed part of a
linear boundary. Most of the cairns appear to be undisturbed examples and are
likely to contain buried information.
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
It includes a 5 metre boundary around the archaeological features,
considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.
Source: Historic England
The East Moors in Derbyshire includes all the gritstone moors east of the
River Derwent. It covers an area of 105 sq km, of which around 63% is open
moorland and 37% is enclosed. As a result of recent and on-going
archaeological survey, the East Moors area is becoming one of the best
recorded upland areas in England. On the enclosed land the archaeological
remains are fragmentary, but survive sufficiently well to show that early
human activity extended beyond the confines of the open moors.
On the open moors there is significant and well-articulated evidence over
extensive areas for human exploitation of the gritstone uplands from the
Neolithic to the post-medieval periods. Bronze Age activity accounts for the
most intensive use of the moorlands. Evidence for it includes some of the
largest and best preserved field systems and cairnfields in northern England
as well settlement sites, numerous burial monuments, stone circles and other
ceremonial remains which, together, provide a detailed insight into life in
the Bronze Age. Also of importance is the well preserved and often visible
relationship between the remains of earlier and later periods since this
provides an insight into successive changes in land use through time.
A large number of the prehistoric sites on the moors, because of their rarity
in a national context, excellent state of preservation and inter-connections,
will be identified as nationally important.
Cairnfields are concentrations of cairns sited in close proximity to one
another. They often consist largely of clearance cairns, built with stone
cleared from the surrounding land surface to improve its use for agriculture
and on occasions their distribution pattern can be seen to define field plots.
Occasionally, some of the cairns were used for funerary purposes, although
without excavation it is difficult to determine which cairns contain burials.
Clearance cairns were constructed from the Neolithic period (from c.3,400 BC),
although the majority date from the Bronze Age (2,000-700 BC). Cairnfields can
also retain information concerning the development of land use and
agricultural practices as well as the diversity of beliefs and social
organisation during the prehistoric period.
The cairnfield 870m north east of Lane End Farm is a discrete group of well
preserved cairns which appear to be part of a small area of prehistoric
clearance for agricultural purposes. As such, it is important to our
understanding of prehistoric agriculture and settlement on the gritstone moors
of the Peak District.
Source: Historic England
Books and journals
Barnatt, J W, 'Derbyshire Archaeological Journal' in Bronze Age Remains on the East Moors of the Peak District, (1986), 67-8
Barnatt, J W, 'Derbyshire Archaeological Journal' in Bronze Age Remains on the East Moors of the Peak District, (1986), 67-8
Source: Historic England
Other nearby scheduled monuments