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Sacred Stones in Indian Civilization: with Special Reference to Megaliths

Sacred Stones in Indian Civilization: with Special Reference to Megaliths

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<< Our Photo Pages >> Duloe - Stone Circle in England in Cornwall

Submitted by Andy B on Friday, 23 February 2018  Page Views: 29578

Neolithic and Bronze AgeSite Name: Duloe
Country: England County: Cornwall Type: Stone Circle
Nearest Town: East/West Looe  Nearest Village: Duloe
Map Ref: SX23585831  Landranger Map Number: 201
Latitude: 50.398126N  Longitude: 4.483645W
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
4 Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
3 Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
5 Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
5

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optimistic20814 jimstone whese001 sorschaL Monocular71 would like to visit

Catrinm visited on 7th Jan 2023 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 5 Access: 4 Lovely 10 th visit to this unusual circle - huge stones for Cornwall

philw visited on 21st Dec 2020 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 4

Catrinm visited on 14th Feb 2020 - their rating: Cond: 5 Amb: 5 Access: 4 Lovely little circle last came about 20 years ago

lucasn visited on 3rd Sep 2018 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 3 Access: 5

Richard13 visited on 1st Jul 2016 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 3 Access: 5

NickyD visited on 21st Aug 2015 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 5

graemefield visited on 22nd Oct 2013 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 5

BolshieBoris visited on 1st Aug 1989 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 5

X-Ice visited on 1st Aug 1984 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 4

Twistytwirly visited - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 4

celticmaiden55 Bladup rldixon paulcall AngieLake hamish Andy B davidmorgan cazzyjane Runemage Bolstered ArchAstro mark_a have visited here

Average ratings for this site from all visit loggers: Condition: 4.1 Ambience: 4 Access: 4.5

Duloe
Duloe submitted by cazzyjane : Duloe Stone Circle. (part of). Oil on Canvas. (Vote or comment on this photo)
The eight large and stunningly white quartz stones that make up this oval-shaped circle vary up to 2.6m (8 feet 6 inches) in height. The largest weighs about 12 tons and is located in the south. The dimensions of the circle are 11.9m (39 feet) N-S by 10.7m (35 feet).

Access: In Duloe village on the B3254, west of the road in field behind a farm.

A Geophysical Survey of Duloe Stone Circle in 2017 found a likely cist in the centre and other new features, more details in the comment on our page
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Duloe
Duloe submitted by cazzyjane : Duloe Stone circle. Oil on canvas (3 comments - Vote or comment on this photo)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by rldixon : a bit of a bugger no cat came to take me round the stones :( but it was overcast and my cat doesnt bother to go out unless the sun shines :) (2 comments - Vote or comment on this photo)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by rldixon : another photo with out a cat :) (Vote or comment on this photo)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by stonedowser : The stones are MUCH bigger than I'd expected, I was impressed. Quite simple from the dowsing standpoint. See web page. Ian. (2 comments - Vote or comment on this photo)

St Cuby's Well (Duloe)
St Cuby's Well (Duloe) submitted by cazzyjane : St Cuby's Well, Duloe. Though the building looks quite tiny from the road, it has an outer half which has a stone seat (despite being inside this can hold a lot of water, so check before you sit!) and a type of inner chapel which is older. It is really rather dark in here but also very peaceful with the soothing sound of the dripping water. (3 comments)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by mikeaitch : Duloe 29/04/11 (1 comment)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by bec-zog : Duloe Stone circle

Duloe
Duloe submitted by cazzyjane : the ginger guardian in January 2010. (3 comments)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by steveco : Duloe Stone Circle SX235582

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : Duloe stone circle.

Duloe
Duloe submitted by mikeaitch : The large size of the stones and small size of the circle make Duloe unique in Cornwall. 29/04/11

Duloe
Duloe submitted by mikeaitch : Duloe 29/04/11 (2 comments)

St Cuby's Well (Duloe)
St Cuby's Well (Duloe) submitted by ocifant : St Cuby's Well, just south of Duloe Village. A lovely little well with bags of atmosphere, despite being within feet of a main road. (1 comment)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Andy B :

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Humbucker : Arrived in Duloe village during a downpour. Got to the stones as the sun re-appeared just in time to catch this rainbow making an arc over the stones. Very pretty! (2 comments)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : Duloe stone circle.

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup (2 comments)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by postman : 10th February 2013

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : Duloe stone circle

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : Duloe stone circle. (2 comments)

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : Sunset at the magnificent Duloe stone circle.

Duloe
Duloe submitted by Bladup : The lovely Duloe stone circle.

Duloe
Duloe submitted by mikeaitch : No cat to guide us round the circle but we did have sheep! 29/04/11 (13 comments)

These are just the first 25 photos of Duloe. If you log in with a free user account you will be able to see our entire collection.

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Stone Pages (Still Images) by Arosio and Meozzi
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Nearby sites listing. In the following links * = Image available
 241m SSW 202° St Cuby's Church Iron Age Fort* Hillfort (SX23485809)
 609m ESE 123° St Cuby's Well (Duloe)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX24085796)
 2.2km SSW 210° St Non's Well (Cornwall)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX224564)
 2.3km NNE 30° St Keyne's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX248603)
 2.6km SSW 203° Yearle’s Fort Hillfort (SX2246555953)
 3.6km SW 216° Hall Rings Hillfort (SX214555)
 4.0km S 180° Watergate Stone* Standing Stone (Menhir) (SX23455436)
 4.1km E 95° Bin Down (East Looe)* Ancient Village or Settlement (SX2764957830)
 4.6km SW 222° Holy Well in Pelynt Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX204550)
 4.7km SE 146° Barrow near Looe Barrow Cemetery (SX2611054356)
 4.9km W 281° Bury Camp (Cornwall)* Hillfort (SX188594)
 5.3km SW 220° Pelynt Barrow Cemetery* Barrow Cemetery (SX200544)
 5.3km SSE 156° St Mary's Well (Cornwall)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX256534)
 5.5km SSE 167° Portlooe Cross* Ancient Cross (SX24625289)
 5.9km SW 233° Bake rings* Ancient Village or Settlement (SX187549)
 6.3km NNE 13° Pipe Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX252644)
 6.3km SSE 158° St Martin's Well (Shutta) Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX258524)
 6.4km S 175° Hendersick Barrow* Round Barrow(s) (SX23965196)
 7.0km SSW 206° Polperro (Kellow) Standing Stone* Standing Stone (Menhir) (SX20275216)
 7.3km WNW 302° Middle Taphouse Round Barrow (B)* Round Barrow(s) (SX175624)
 7.9km SSW 202° St Peter's Holy Well (Cornwall)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SX20395105)
 8.0km NW 305° Middle Taphouse Round Barrow (A)* Round Barrow(s) (SX172631)
 8.3km ENE 69° Padderbury Top Ancient Village or Settlement (SX3139661023)
 9.1km NW 311° Largin Castle Hillfort (SX16896454)
 9.9km N 5° Church of St Clarus* Early Christian Sculptured Stone (SX247681)
View more nearby sites and additional images

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Cornovia: Ancient Sites of Cornwall and Scilly, Craig Weatherhill

Cornovia: Ancient Sites of Cornwall and Scilly, Craig Weatherhill

Web Links for Duloe

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Megalithic Mysteries by Andy Burnham

Archived Web links for Duloe

Caradon Archaeology Group by Mike Peacock

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"Duloe" | Login/Create an Account | 28 News and Comments
  
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Re: Duloe Stone Circle by RoyReed on Wednesday, 03 July 2019
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Here's a link to a 360Β° panorama of the Duloe Stone Circle made in March 2019.
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Duloe Stone Circle by lucasn on Sunday, 28 October 2018
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Re: source of Quartz stones by angieweekender on Tuesday, 13 March 2018
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I've just visited Duloe today. Definitely vein Quartz. The information board says that the most likely source of the stones is Morval, 1 mile away as there is a mineral called ankarite in the stones. The other site for this mineral is Herodsfoot which is a large mineral load and mine just outside of Liskeard.
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    Re: source of Quartz stones by AngieLake on Tuesday, 13 March 2018
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    Just to mention that I'd added the comment on 4th March regarding one source as being Herodsfoot (see below).
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      Re: source of Quartz stones by angieweekender on Thursday, 15 March 2018
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      Sorry to be repetitive. I use the mobile site and the thread doesn't appear in its entirety. Still good we agree on the source if the rocks πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€
      [ Reply to This ]

Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Friday, 02 March 2018
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My interest in Duloe is that the standing stones are of white quartz. Does anyone know whether they were extracted in the immediate location or whether they came from afar? I know that much of Cornwall is volcanic but I would like to know where the white quartz stones came from. I see the drawings of the results of dowsing, something that does not work for me, and wonder whether the results show the activity outside the circle. Does the line between the north and south stones extend far in the same direction outside with as much force as it seems to do inside? Also, is there any other line of force outside that has no obvious connection to those inside? I would love to know the direction that it follows.

My new book has a chapter on this subject and I seek as much information as is possible - from interested and intelligent people such as yourselves. Also, I would like permission to use and quote this material please.

Any help that you can give me will be much appreciated. Thank you.

Robert Soper
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    Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by AngieLake on Friday, 02 March 2018
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    Hi Robert. (In answer to your question about activity outside of the circle):

    Sorry I can't help here: the only three lines I dowsed from south to north (red 2, blue 4, and green 6 in Part 1) were contained in the circle of stones. I did not dowse anything further outside, as the 'ceremony' ended inside the N stone (see Part 2) and I was tired by then. This was done in 2005, and I've not dowsed there since, and judging by photos I've posted, 2008 was the last time I visited (with JackME).
    I've looked in some old files and can't see anywhere I'd made any notes about dowsing further to the north or south. If I come across anything I will add to this.
    [ Reply to This ]
      Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Sunday, 04 March 2018
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      Thanks for that. May I use your drawing please in which case I need a name for the credit if at all possible.

      I really do need to know where these stones originated. If local then fine but if they came from any distance away one must ask why? Yes, why use white quartz if local stones are available nearby? One weighing 12 tons needs a lot of strong men and a lot of very strong rope as well. They must have had a very great need to go to all that trouble.
      [ Reply to This ]
        Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by AngieLake on Sunday, 04 March 2018
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        Hello again Robert.
        Yes, you may use those two dowsing plans for your book, and all the descriptions of what is going on will be in comments underneath them on the Duloe site page. My name is Angela Lake, and friends call me Angie, hence 'AngieLake' being my Meg P name.
        I usually add 'copyright: Angie (or Angela) Lake, ...(date)...' to those plans, but I see I forgot to do that with the Duloe ones.
        They are copyright, so could you state that too?
        Let me know when the book is ready to come out. Best of luck with it.
        (NB: I've just realised you've been discussing your subject in the Forum, but I rarely follow those subjects.)

        I googled for 'origin of Duloe circle quartz stones' and found this:

        "Most Cornish circles are made of granite stones, but at Duloe the stones have a high quartz content, making them appear almost white in bright sunlight. The stones are thought to come from an outcrop of the Herodsfoot lead lode about 2 miles away, though there is a similar outcrop at Tregarland Tor about a mile away. The stones weigh up to 9 tons, and it is thought that it would have taken teams of 30-35 people to move them to their present site at Duloe."
        On this website:
        http://www.britainexpress.com/counties/cornwall/ancient/duloe-stone-circle.htm
        [ Reply to This ]
          Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Monday, 05 March 2018
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          Thanks Angie, full credit will be given. I look at this subject through the eyes of an engineer who questions things that do not add up. I am extremely interested in the use of stones etc that were not sourced locally. By locally I mean by simply using an outcrop or shards left on the spot. Moving a 9 ton lump of inanimate stone across a bleak moor for any distance could not have been easy and my interest is in why they bothered. 2 miles is a long way because they would need to be hauled, rather than rolled, indicating a sophistcated method of making very strong rope. Why source and then extract white quartz when locally was all the granite necessary for a simple stone circle? I see that others have identified a 'cist' in the centre of this circle. Do you know in what context they use the word 'cist'?

          I most certainly will give you full credit for your help here which is much appreciated. I estimate now that the book will be ready by around the early summer and will let you knowin due course.
          [ Reply to This ]
            Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by golux on Monday, 05 March 2018
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            Hi Robert
            If you are asking what archeologists mean by "cist", it is a stone box, commonly formed by excavating a trough then lining the base and sides with stones and covering it with more stones, used by neolithic people as a grave.
            [ Reply to This ]
              Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Wednesday, 07 March 2018
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              Thanks Angie, I just wondered whether it was a big one to hold a body or a small one to hold artefacts? It may or may not be significant.
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                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by golux on Wednesday, 07 March 2018
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                Cists are burial chambers, for storing bodies not artefacts.
                (And I'm not Angie.)
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                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by angieweekender on Friday, 09 March 2018
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                Cists held both human remains and objects/grave goods. Look at the WhiteHorse hill cist for a good example. I am another Angie πŸ˜€
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                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by angieweekender on Friday, 09 March 2018
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                And there's often pottery/ beakers/ burial urns in cists
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                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by AngieLake on Friday, 09 March 2018
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                The title to this thread may not be relevant, unless Robert decided it was another reason for the quartz stones to be involved?
                (I wonder if you just typed your first comment into the comment box at the bottom of the site page, without changing the Subject title, Robert?)

                Thanks for the comment regarding my dowsing plans and the copyright statement.
                Regarding the ritual aspect, I feel compelled to see these circles and tomb forecourts as places where such ceremonies were enacted, but of course, they may just have been meeting places, or trading places. When I ask the rods to show me where the 'priest/ess' moved in their ceremony at the height of the sites' importance, I have to take their response at face value. However, as I always add, there is no way to prove this and I offer the results with an open mind, for others to make up their own minds. One day it may become possible to tell more about the findings, some of which could possibly be magnetic responses. As I've sometimes been led to another area of the site that is important, or taken near or around the sites of votive deposits, I tend to lean towards the ritual result.
                [ Reply to This ]
            Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by AngieLake on Tuesday, 06 March 2018
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            Thanks Robert. I think there must have (originally) been something very special about the site of the circle and when someone from that community found the quartz stones at the other site, they just 'had to have them'. Probably out to impress the neighbours? or impress the gods??
            The builders of Stonehenge moved those huge Sarsens from quite a distance, and whatever theory you have about the bluestones, they still had to be moved from another area.

            I'm fascinated by the human-shaped stone -
            http://www.megalithic.co.uk/modules.php?op=modload&name=a312&file=index&do=showpic&pid=15748
            Maybe it was chosen for that reason? Maybe that was the first (or only one) chosen, as it represented a shining god, and then they thought 'why not make a circle and make it ALL from quartz?' (Just thinking aloud.)

            I often wonder whether my Stone 16 theory (the sarsen at the SW arc of Stonehenge) was there previously, and represented a goddess or fertility symbol. Surely it's possible that one of those sarsens could have stood there before the first stage of SH?

            Nice to be prompted into thinking outside the circle [box], ha!ha!
            [ Reply to This ]
              Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Wednesday, 07 March 2018
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              I have a problem with the constant religious idea for these things and like to look at other optiions which is why I am so interested in the quartz. As you say, those bluestones had to have been mighty important for them to go to all that trouble. And why, just outside Dunoon in Scotland, did someone source and then put on site a large piece of Rock Crystal on a cairn? There is no Rock Crystal anywhere near the Clyde.

              My book is looking at it all forensically through the eyes of an engineer. I only see what is before me and ask the questions of when? how? and, most of all, why?

              All fascinating stuff that keep the little grey cells ticking over.

              Great to be in touch Angie and the copyright notice has gone in with your drawing. The text is about done, now for the line drawings after which I breath a huge sigh of relief.
              [ Reply to This ]
                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Monday, 12 March 2018
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                We seem to be slightly out of sequence here Angie but I am interested in what you say. I am assuming that the cist here is one for bits and pieces rather than a body because it doesn't look all that big. As I have said, dowsing does not work with me. No matter how much I try, nothing happens but I see your phrase 'when I ask the rods' and find it interesting indeed. How do I 'ask' my dowsing tools something? Are they not re-active rarher than pro-active? How do you ask dowsing rods something in this context?
                [ Reply to This ]
                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Martin_L on Monday, 12 March 2018
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                The size of a cist does not clearly indicates its purpose because there have been various forms of burials: for example crouched inhumations and esp. cremation burials. So even in very small cists several containers with cremation burials have been found.
                [ Reply to This ]
                Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by AngieLake on Monday, 12 March 2018
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                Hello Robert
                I'm sorry I posted the last reply under the wrong thread, it was too late when I noticed. Never mind, it's all on the site page, but I guess Andy would have preferred it to be a thread on the Forum?
                If you click on this link:
                http://www.megalithic.co.uk/modules.php?op=modload&name=Forum&file=viewtopic&topic=3848&forum=4
                it takes you to an article I wrote about my methods of dowsing in 2010 (I don't belong to a group these days, and rarely dowse now, btw), and hopefully it will give you the answers.
                When dowsing, you do need to have a thought in your mind about what you are seeking. (ie: lots of people try locating underground pipes).
                Try to be quiet in yourself and shut out other thoughts then focus on what you are looking for.
                Many people say they ask for permission to dowse before they start, but I'm afraid I don't.
                If you go to Devon dowsers org and type Angie Lake in the search box (or is it Angela Lake?), it'll take you to some of the reports I've posted there.
                [ Reply to This ]
    Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by angieweekender on Friday, 09 March 2018
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    Areas of Cornwall are not just volcanic, they are granitic. If you are looking for a source of large lumps of Quartz , look no further than the China clay areas. You get huge thick seams/veins of Quartz. The nearest China clay area is St. Neots which is 7 miles away. I'm not sure whether there is any older workings nearer to Duloe where the large Quartz could be sourced. I mean enormous. You'd have to go and have a look at defunct China clay quarry to witness it. They beggar belief!
    [ Reply to This ]
      Re: UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Rivierawriter on Wednesday, 14 March 2018
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      Thanks Angieweekender for that. It merely confirms my theory that whether the quartz deposit is a hundred yards, or seven miles, away, shifting a massive 9 ton boulder is no mean feat. Think of a very large and full skip that must be dragged across that moor. It must have been extremely important to do so when they could have so easily completed the circle with smaller local stones of granite. I wonder what was so important so very long ago????

      And Angie Lake thanks for clarifying the dowsing. I have come across water and gas board people dowsing on building sites in my time in the industry. It still doesn't work for me though!!
      [ Reply to This ]

RoyG's video by Runemage on Thursday, 16 November 2017
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A Geophysical Survey of Duloe Stone Circle finds likely cist and other new features by Andy B on Friday, 24 March 2017
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A Geophysical Survey of Duloe Stone Circle, Duloe, Cornwall, Southeast Kernow Archaeological Survey Report 7 by Peter Nicholas, Les Dodd, James Lewis and Dr Catherine Frieman, 2017.

The survey took place during 2013 and 2016 with the consent of the landowners, as part of a wider project of the Southeast Kernow Archaeology Survey.

The objectives were to undertake complete magnetic and resistivity surveys of the stone circle at Duloe to establish the character and extent of the subsurface remains. The magnetometry results revealed several unknown features within the monument, strongly suggesting the existence of a cist at the centre of the circle. If this is the case then whilst similar examples exist in other parts of the country, notably Cumbria, this is the first example of a cist in the centre of a stone circle in Cornwall.

Also an outer circular ditch was found, which is a new feature not previously recorded.

The presence of small circular anomalies, probably prehistoric pits containing pots and/or cremations, features which have been recorded at the site previously, indicate a level of activity at the monument which is not apparent from the surface remains alone.

To develop a deeper understanding of the site and enable it to be placed within its local, regional and national context it is suggested here that the site would benefit from further investigation with a small targeted excavation and an expanded geophysical survey.

https://www.academia.edu/31998600/
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Re: Duloe by coldrum on Monday, 12 October 2009
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Pastscape:

http://www.pastscape.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=434814
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UFO witness appeal at Duloe by Andy B on Monday, 31 July 2006
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UFO witness appeal

THE Cornwall UFO research Group is appealing for witnesses after a reported sighting of seven flying discs in South East Cornwall. Dave Gillham, founder of the group, said he wanted to know if other people had seen the phenomenon on July 25 at about 12.20am. He was contacted by three people who saw objects flying above seven standing stones near Duloe for about 20 minutes. Anyone who also saw the event can contact Mr Gillham through http://www.cornwall-ufo.co.uk/
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