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Cairn, surviving as an impressive large sub-circular structure of bare stones, measuring 24 m in diameter and 4.4 m high. The cairn is the sole survivor of a cemetery of three large cairns clustered on the long low ridge of Cairn Muir and extant in the 18th century. In the 1740s the cairns were reported to be about 90m apart and originally circa 90 m in circumference and about 12m high. The other two cairns, and other smaller cairns in the vicinity, have long been destroyed (See NJ96SE0027). Antiquarian excavations recovered a beaker and a broken leaf-shaped bronze sword (although it is unclear whether antiquarian reports of excavations at Memsie refer to the surviving or one of the destroyed cairns). Also found were bones, a flint 'dart-head' and a 'little block of flint'. The cairn's plain, unardorned profile and absence of vegetation are typical of the larger Bronze Age cairns of the region. It is a rare survival in an intensively farmed area where much of the archaeology has been destroyed or ploughed flat.
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