Monument record MHG7570 - Dun, Dunan

Summary

No summary available.

Location

Grid reference Centred NG 8626 8333 (80m by 80m) (Buffered by site type)
Map sheet NG88SE
Geographical Area ROSS AND CROMARTY
Old County ROSS-SHIRE

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

NG88SE 4 8627 8333.
There was once a dun at Tournaig. The site is still called Dunan, or the 'little dun'. 'It is only evidenced today by the large stepping-stones that give dry access to it at the highest spring-tides'.
J H Dixon 1886.

At NG 8627 8333 on a conical peninsula approx 12m above HWM on Spring Tide, on S shore of Loch Thurnaig, are the heather-covered remains of a dun, still known locally as Dunan.
The vague inner defences approx 2.5m wide and 1m high forming two-thirds of a circle 22m internal diameter and incorporating sheer cliffs in NE, consist of tumbled rubble stones, with a few larger irregularly-shaped stones defining the wall faces. There is no trace of an entrance.
All that can be seen of outer defences is a scarp, 1.5 m max ht., and several orthostats marking wall-face. It joins E & W cliffs on the landward side of dun. The entrance is in SE.
The grassy isthmus is about 10m wide at HWM on Spring Tide, and is traversed by a line of flat-topped stepping-stones, 0.4 m high, which join the lowest point of the dun to the mainland.
Both lines of defences are very amorphous, but the inner wall appears to have been constructed of parallel lines of unworked stones with rubble infilling, similar to the nearby hut-circles (See NG88SE 14 and 15) Visited by OS (N K B) 18 March 1965.

This dun occupies top of a conical stack which projects into Loch Thuirnaig and is joined to mainland by a narrow neck of low-lying ground. The dun wall is visible only on S and W margins of stack and may never have existed on N and E. Enclosing a roughly oval area 21m from N-S x 17m transversely, it has been reduced to a stony bank 2.6m in thickness and up to 0.5m in height. A number of boulders forming the basal course of the outer face of the wall can be seen through the deep heather that covers the site. An outwork has been drawn across the neck of the promontory, the lowest course of its outer face comprising massive boulders, with a gap on the SE which may indicate the position of the entrance.
(Inverewe 43) Visited by RCAHMS (DCC) 9 June 1994

Sources/Archives (5)

  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Dun, Ob na ba Ruaidhe. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Dun, Ob na ba Ruaidhe. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Dun, Ob na ba Ruaidhe. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Dun, Ob na ba Ruaidhe. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Text/Publication/Volume: Dixon, J H. 1886. Gairloch in north west Ross-shire: its records, traditions inhabitants and natural history with a guide to Gairloch and Loch Maree. 98.

Finds (0)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (0)

Record last edited

Sep 22 2008 3:17PM

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