Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 2Department of Archaeology, 1983 - Archaeology |
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Page 52
... stones ' had been erected . These are small stones which are generally considered by archaeologists to be an unconvincing amalgam of natural , medieval and post - medieval features such as rubbing posts and glacial erratics . In ...
... stones ' had been erected . These are small stones which are generally considered by archaeologists to be an unconvincing amalgam of natural , medieval and post - medieval features such as rubbing posts and glacial erratics . In ...
Page 61
... stones or the grass , from lighting fires and from picnicking among the stones . Often , doubtless , the guardian was absent or unable to act effectively , but the intention was there . Sir Edmund , announcing himself as the ...
... stones or the grass , from lighting fires and from picnicking among the stones . Often , doubtless , the guardian was absent or unable to act effectively , but the intention was there . Sir Edmund , announcing himself as the ...
Page 63
... stones were still being used as slides by children ; the rats that lived on the picnic scraps were still burrowing under the stones . No upright stones had actually fallen , but they certainly would and " more probably soon than later ...
... stones were still being used as slides by children ; the rats that lived on the picnic scraps were still burrowing under the stones . No upright stones had actually fallen , but they certainly would and " more probably soon than later ...
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