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Latitude: 56.4595 / 56°27'34"N
Longitude: -5.3823 / 5°22'56"W
OS Eastings: 191701
OS Northings: 734835
OS Grid: NM917348
Mapcode National: GBR FC2N.5DJ
Mapcode Global: WH1HC.9W7Y
Entry Name: Tiroran, cairn 130m SE of
Scheduled Date: 16 September 2010
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Source ID: SM12912
Schedule Class: Cultural
Category: Prehistoric ritual and funerary: cairn (type uncertain)
Location: Ardchattan and Muckairn
County: Argyll and Bute
Electoral Ward: Oban North and Lorn
Traditional County: Argyllshire
The monument comprises the remains of a cairn, built probably in the late Neolithic or Bronze Age between 3000 and 1000 BC. It is visible as a low irregular mound of small and medium sized stones, mostly covered by moss or other vegetation. It lies at North Connel, 70m north of Loch Etive and 220m south of Lochan na Beithe. The site is around 15m above sea level on a site raised above Loch Etive that gives good views to the south-east and south-west. The monument was first scheduled in 1977 as part of a scheduling that also included two other cairns located to the south-east and north-west, but an inadequate area was included to protect all of the archaeological remains. The present rescheduling rectifies this and relates only to this cairn; the other two cairns are being rescheduled separately.
The upstanding remains of the cairn measure around 19m N-S by 18m transversely and stand to around 0.5m in height. Despite later attrition the cairn continues to form an upstanding feature in the landscape. The cairn stands at the southern edge of an area of level ground. Immediately to the south, the ground begins to slope down towards Loch Etive.
The area to be scheduled is irregular on plan, to include the remains described above and an area around within which evidence relating to the monument's construction, use and abandonment may survive, as shown in red on the accompanying map. The scheduling extends up to, but specifically excludes, a post-and-wire fence that bounds the south side of the road to the north of the cairn.
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Cultural Significance
The monument's cultural significance can be expressed as follows:
Intrinsic characteristics
The cairn may have spread from its original form and has evidently been truncated by later activity, but was probably a round cairn originally. Excavation elsewhere suggests that many round cairns were used to cover and mark human burials and are late Neolithic or Bronze Age in origin, dating most commonly from the late third millennium BC to the early second millennium BC. Archaeological information is likely to exist buried beneath the stones, possibly including one or more burials. The excavation of similar mounds elsewhere in Scotland shows that such cairns often incorporate or overlie graves or pits containing cist settings, skeletal remains in the form of cremations or inhumations, and artefacts such as pottery and flintwork. About a dozen cairns in the Lorn area contain or are known to have contained burial cists and comparable remains may exist beneath this cairn. These deposits can help us understand more about the practice and significance of burial and commemorating the dead at specific times in prehistory. They may also help us to understand the changing structure of society in the area. In addition, the cairn is likely to overlie and seal a buried land surface that could provide evidence of the immediate environment before the monument was constructed. Botanical remains, including pollen or charred plant material, may also survive within archaeological deposits deriving from the cairn's construction and use. This evidence can help us to build up a picture of climate, vegetation and agriculture in the area before and during construction and use of the cairn.
Contextual characteristics
This monument lies at the southern edge of the Moss of Achnacree, a peninsula of relatively low, flat land that extends south between Ardmucknish Bay to the west and Loch Etive to the south-east. This is an area of glacial deposits probably associated with the retreat of the glacier that occupied Loch Etive and has seen the growth of peat 1m-5m thick over recent millennia. There is a cluster of important archaeological sites lying on and around the moss to the north and east of this cairn, within approximately 2km. The cluster includes two well-known chambered cairns, Carn Ban and Achnacreebeag, dating from the Neolithic period, between 4500 BC and 2500 BC, as well as a larger number of other cairns, without identified chambers, that are likely to date from the late Neolithic or Bronze Age, between around 3000 BC and 1000 BC. Many of the latter are comparable to this monument. They are typically between 11m and 24m in diameter and stand between 0.6m and 2.6m high. Larger examples also exist in the wider vicinity: the cairns of Lorn range in size from 4m to about 43m in diameter. A variety of other archaeological remains are known in the area, including two enclosures of uncertain date that lie within 1km to the north-east and north-north-west. The growth of peat has sealed a range of known structures and deposits, including field banks and buried soils, and there is high potential for the discovery of additional, hitherto unknown remains. These may provide information about settlement, agriculture and economy to complement the evidence of the cairns themselves. Thus, given the many comparable sites in the area, this monument has the potential to further our understanding not just of funerary site location and practice, but also of the structure of early prehistoric society and economy.
National Importance
This monument is of national importance because it has an inherent potential to make a significant addition to our understanding of the past, particularly the design and construction of burial monuments, the nature of burial practices and their significance in prehistoric and later society. Although the upstanding elements of this monument have been significantly quarried, it retains high value because of its position close to two other cairns and because it lies in a landscape where there are several more distant cairns, as well as a diverse range of other archaeological features. The loss of the monument would significantly diminish our future ability to appreciate and understand the placing of such monuments within the landscape and the meaning and importance of death and burial in prehistoric life.
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Bibliography
RCAHMS records the site as NM93SW 16. The WoSAS SMR records the site as WoSASPIN 1438.
References
RCAHMS, 1975, Argyll; an Inventory of the Ancient Monuments, Vol 2, Lorn, HMSO: Edinburgh
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
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