Coordinates: 50°31′27.74″N 4°32′52.21″W / 50.5243722°N 4.5478361°W / 50.5243722; -4.5478361

Brown Gelly

From The Right Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

Brown Gelly
File:Cairn on Brown Gelly - geograph.org.uk - 1274.jpg
Brown Gelly Cairn
Highest point
Elevation342 m (1,122 ft)
Prominence74 m (243 ft)
Parent peakBrown Willy
ListingTump
Coordinates50°31′27.74″N 4°32′52.21″W / 50.5243722°N 4.5478361°W / 50.5243722; -4.5478361
Geography
Location of Brown Gelly on Bodmin Moor within Cornwall
LocationBodmin Moor, Cornwall, England, UK
OS gridSX196727
Topo mapOS Landranger 201

Brown Gelly (Cornish: Bronn Geliow) is a tor, hill and ridge near Dozmary Pool on Bodmin Moor near Liskeard in Cornwall, UK.[1][2] At its foot lies Browngelly Downs, and the area has preserved various remains of hut circles, barrows and cairns.[3] Five cairns are located in a semi-circular arc along the ridge of Brown Gelly. They are prominent from a distance and Christopher Tilley suggests they were intended to be seen as a group from the west and the east in order to "analogically resemble or simulate tors".[4] The tor is made of a granitic rock that has less autogenic alteration than other areas of Bodmin Moor due to some type of local anomaly.[5] Archaeological aerial reconnaissance was carried out over the area in the 1980s which suggested the remains of a prehistoric settlement comprising several dispersed hut circles.[6] These structures have also been called a "barrow group" by John Barnatt[7] Evidence of flint production and tin streaming has also been found in the area that supports the suggestion of an ancient settlement.[8]

File:Road on Pinnockshill - geograph.org.uk - 710490.jpg
Brown Gelly from Pinnockshill

References

  1. Royal Geological Society of Cornwall (1960). Transactions of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall p. 236 & 237.
  2. Rita Margaret Barton (1964). An introduction to the geology of Cornwall, p. 144. Truro Bookshop.
  3. Claude Berry (1971). Portrait of Cornwall, p 48. Hale. Retrieved 20 March 2011.
  4. Christopher Tilley (2010). INTERPRETING LANDSCAPES: GEOLOGIES, TOPOGRAPHIES, IDENTITIES; EXPLORATIONS IN LANDSCAPE PHENOMENOLOGY 3, p409. Left Coast Press. p. 355. ISBN 978-1-59874-374-6.
  5. Henry Woodward (1961). Geological magazine, P. 429. Cambridge University Press.
  6. Gordon S. Maxwell; John Kenneth Sinclair St. Joseph (1983). The Impact of aerial reconnaissance on archaeology. Council for British Archaeology. ISBN 978-0-906780-24-4.
  7. John Barnatt (1982). Prehistoric Cornwall: the ceremonial monuments, p. 208. Turnstone Press. ISBN 978-0-85500-129-2. Retrieved 20 March 2011.
  8. Robin Davidson (1978). Cornwall. Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-0588-0.

External links