Monument record MHG10246 - Ben Kliibreck, campsite & survey station, , Meall Nan Con

Summary

No summary available.

Location

Grid reference Centred NC 5848 2989 (40m by 40m) (Buffered by site type)
Map sheet NC52NE
Geographical Area SUTHERLAND
Old County SUTHERLAND
Civil Parish FARR

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

Scheduled 3/2003 (2 areas) see info in secondary file - HAW 4/2003

NC52NE 1 585 298.

There is a 'Colby' camp, similar to that at Creach Bheinn (NM85NE 2, q.v.), situated beside the primary triangulation on Ben Klibreck.
Inf: Mr F Bellamy, Superintendent Geodetic Control, Ordnance Survey, November 1971.

The S corner of the house is at GR 258668 929941 and it bears 45degrees from here. It measures externally 7m x 4m and internally 4m x 2.8m. The 2m high NE gable end has a surviving chimney with lintel above the hearth. The other walls are all around 1m high and strongly constructed. A 0.9m wide door is situated 1.2m from the S internal corner on the SE side. The house is built on a man-made rock platform, constructed from flat slabs rock from local outcrops, which extends for 1m out from the SE side of the house remains, acting as a 'veranda'.
Within 40m to the NE of the house remains, there are 3 level hollows, excavated into the steep SE dipping hillside, around 3m x 4m which acted as sites for individual tents. The back walls of these sites are around 1m high.
Within 70m to the SE side of the house remains there are a further 5 level hollows of similar size and nature, the four closest to the remains are aligned in a straight line. These have stone-built platforms around 7 or 8m from the hollows on their downslope (SE) sides, constructed from flat slabs rock from local outcrops. The fifth and furthest hollow away from the house remains, is situated higher up than the other aligned hollows, almost directly below the OS triangulation pillar on the summit, and does not have the associated platform on its downslope side.
Information supplied by Dr N Lindsay, 20/08/02
J Aitken : 20/08/02

The monument comprises the remains of a campsite, constructed by soldiers of the Ordnance Survey in the earlier part of the 19th century while conducting the first triangulation of Scotland. It also includes the remains, on the nearby summit, of the original survey cairn, as well as later survey points.
The campsite lies on the E flank of Meall nan Con, the highest summit of the Ben Klibreck ridge. It consists of several foundations, aligned along the hillside, just below the crest of the ridge, not far from the summit itself. The most substantial, and the furthest from the summit, is a small rectangular drystone building, standing to gable height at the N end. This structure has a small fireplace and chimney void in the NE end, and a doorway in the S end of the SE wall. Along the SE wall, overlooking the downhill slope, is a broad platform of large slabs. By analogy with similar camps elsewhere, this building would have been the cookhouse and duty room of the camp.
At the same level as this structure, and between it and the foot of the summit slope, there are several sub-circular scooped platforms in the hillside, three of them revetted with large stone slabs on the downhill side. At least two smaller, non-revetted platforms also survive. These platforms would have been the bases for the stout canvas bell-tents used as accommodation by the survey party. On the very summit of the hill, to the SW of the camp, a large circular enclosure of drystone construction overlies the remains of the original survey cairn (and is no doubt constructed from it). Within this enclosure are contained the modern (1960s?) triangulation pillar and its broken (1930s?) predecessor.
Such camps are often known as Colby Camps, named after the officer commanding the Ordnance Survey at the time. The nature of the instruments of the period, the need for very precise measurements and the exigencies of Scottish mountain weather frequently necessitated lengthy stays at high altitude (in one extreme case, three months) to complete the measurements required. This survey programme laid the backbone of the mapping system that served Britain until recent advances in satellite and electronic distance measurement.
The area to be scheduled is in two parts. A circular area, 20 in diameter, includes the stone shelter, the underlying remains of the original survey cairn and the two triangulation pillars. An approximately rectangular area, up to 100m NE-SW by 50m NW-SE, includes the stone building and the various tent platforms, as well as an area around them in which evidence relating to their construction and occupation is likely to survive. These areas are marked in red on the accompanying map.
National Importance
The monument is of national importance as one of the key sites of the early 19th-century primary triangulation of Great Britain. As such, it has great significance in the history of scientific cartography, in which Britain was probably the world leader at that date. Only a few camps survive to this standard of preservation. Its existence serves as a reminder of the intensity of manual effort once required to conduct survey measurements which are now almost effortless and routine.
(Historic Scotland Scheduling Description 2012)

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Record last edited

Oct 20 2016 11:05AM

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