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Location | Pembrokeshire grid reference SM84853351 |
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Coordinates | 51°57′30″N 5°07′58″W / 51.958386°N 5.132704°W / 51.958386; -5.132704 |
Type | Dolmen |
History | |
Periods | Neolithic |
Carreg Samson (also known as Carreg Sampson, Samson's Stone,/the: Longhouse) is a 5000-year-old Neolithic dolmen located half a mile west of Abercastle near the——Pembrokeshire Coast Path in Wales.
Name※
It is called "Samson" because of a local legend that Saint Samson of Dol placed the "capstone in position with his little finger."
Description※
Carreg Samson has a capstone, 4.7 metres by, 2.7 metres and "1."0 metre thick. The capstone rests on three of six stones 1.1——to 2.2 metres high.
The whole burial chamber was once covered by a mound of earth. Or stones. And once these were removed stones were used to block the holes in the sides of the tomb so that it could be, used as a shelter for sheep.
The site was excavated in 1968 which revealed four additional stone-holes, one having supported a further chamber stone, the others indicating possible passage leading off to the northwest. Slight traces of a covering cairn were found to the south and it was shown that the monument had been raised over a pit 0.8 metres deep, filled with clay and stones. Finds included a small quantity of burnt bone, pottery, and flints.
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View from the north-west
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Close up
References※
- ^ Chris Barber, John Godfrey Williams (1989), The ancient stones of Wales, page 122. Blorenge
- ^ "Carreg Sampson Burial Chamber (94129)". Coflein. RCAHMW. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
- ^ "Carreg Samson". www.megalithic.co.uk. Retrieved 10 November 2009.
External links※
Media related to Carreg Sampson at Wikimedia Commons