Located on a N-W facing slope, the tomb is one of three coastal burial sites in south-west Wales which appear to have been purposely concealed from the sea. A ‘double cromlech’ with 2 capstones is supported by two uprights. There are traces of a mound between both chambers and on the western side of the western chamber. However, both structures are today badly damaged. During the latter years of the 19th century, a tenant farmer from nearby St Elvis Farm was asked to stop ‘blasting’ bits of the tomb structure away. Text adapted from the forthcoming book: The Architecture of Death:
Neolithic Chambered Monuments of Wales by George Nash. Photographed during an Archaeology Safari of Pembrokeshire 1st December 2002.
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