There are over 9350 photographs on megalithomania.com
For the latest announcements from megalithomania.com please visit the home page
28 photos has been added to the forum gallery in the last 7 days
There are now 71 site plans on megalithomania.com
There are now 140 old images on megalithomania.com
There are now over 2150 sites featured on megalithomania.com
3 new old images have been added in the last 7 days
9 new visit notes have been added in the last 7 days
63 new photos have been added in the last 7 days - 20 in the last 24 hours.
4 new 3D images have been added in the last 7 days

Maulatanavally : Stone Circle

CountyCork
Grid RefW 263 442
GPSW 26338 44215 (7m)
Longitude9° 3' 51.51" W
Latitude51° 38' 44.63" N
ITM east480366
ITM north584435
Nearest TownRoss Carbery (8 Km)
OS Sheets86, 89
UTM zone29U
UTM x449041.07955641
UTM y5761192.2623701
Hide map  (N.B. Google Maps & GPS readings are slightly out of sync - position is approximate)
Show inline map (by Google Maps)

Visit Notes

Sunday, 20th April 2003

As I was walking away from the previous site I saw a farmer in the next field and so asked him about this site. He got into his tractor, telling me to follow him, and drove up to here. What a kind man. After a little chat he showed me the best route to take to the circle. You can park right on the bend; from here walk back down the hill to the gate and then across the first field, over the low wall and then walk up to the stones.

There are just six stones left standing with a few lying around. It would seem reasonable to say that there were originally 13 stones. The axial stone is tiny, at just 40cm high. The stones may have risen in height towards the entrance stones, of which one still stands at 1.2m tall.

There is a magnificent quartz boulder occupying the centre of the circle. I don't think that this could have been an outlier that was moved here because the circle is on the top of a little knoll and any outlier would have been out of site from within the circle. Quite a few of these multiple stone axial circles have quartz blocks, so finding it there is not a surprise. Anyway, it's always good to find a lump of quartz anywhere - in a stone circle it's wonderful!

Apart from quartz, another thing I was to see a lot of during the middle part of my day was Carrigfadda mountain with a huge crucifix on the top. Obviously a large white Jesus, shining in the sun, nailed to a cross is bound to draw one's attention, but why was it put there? The mountain seemed to me to be the focus of all the many circles in this area ... was the crucifix put there because the mountain is an ancient holy mountain and the Christians wanted to either claim it or remember it?

Click Thumbnail to View Full Size Image

Image Taken: Sunday, 20th April 2003<br/><a href='/show/image/2891/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2003</span> _ Image Taken: Sunday, 20th April 2003<br/><a href='/show/image/2892/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2003</span> _ Image Taken: Sunday, 20th April 2003<br/><a href='/show/image/2893/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2003</span> _ Image Taken: Sunday, 20th April 2003<br/><a href='/show/image/2894/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2003</span> _

Saturday, 9th July 2005

This is another great example of how a 'ruined' circle can still be a great circle. The petiteness of these stones and the massive quartz block in the centre are sublime. Granted if it was complete it would look as fantastic as Carrigagulla (County Cork), but not everything can be that good.

Click Thumbnail to View Full Size Image

Image Taken: Saturday, 9th July 2005<br/><a href='/show/image/5471/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2005</span> _ Image Taken: Saturday, 9th July 2005<br/><a href='/show/image/5472/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2005</span> _ Image Taken: Saturday, 9th July 2005<br/><a href='/show/image/5473/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2005</span> _ Image Taken: Saturday, 9th July 2005<br/><a href='/show/image/5474/Maulatanavally.htm' class='redlink'>Permanent Link</a><br/><span class='information'>© Tom FourWinds & megalithomania.com 2005</span> _

How Other People Have Rated This Monument


Uwe H. from Leinfelden-Echterdingen (Germany)

Have you visited This Monument?

If so, give it a rating for others to see
Your Name
Where are you from?
Rating

Random Gazetteer

A Random Selection of Nearby Monuments

Click To View Large Image
8.3 Km (E) there is a Stone Circle at Ballyvackey.
9.3 Km (S) there is a Stone Circle at Drombeg.
7.1 Km (E) there is a Stone Circle at Aghilla.
9 Km (SSE) there is a Portal Tomb at Ahaglaslin.
948.7 m (ENE) there is a Stone Circle at Glanbrack.

A Selection of Other Stone Circles

About Coordinates Displayed

This is an explanation of (and a bit of a disclaimer for) the coordinates I provide.

Where a GPS figure is given this is the master for all other coordinates. According to my Garmin these are quite accurate.

Where there is no GPS figure the 6 figure grid reference is master for the others. This may not be very accurate as it could have come from the OS maps and could have been read by eye. Consequently, all other cordinates are going to have inaccuracies.

The calculation of Longitude and Latitude uses an algorithm that is not 100% accurate. The long/lat figures are used as a basis for calculating the UTM & ITM coordinates. Consequently, UTM & ITM coordinates are slightly out.

UTM is a global coordinate system - Universal Transverse Mercator - that is at the core of the GPS system.

ITM is the new coordinate system - Irish Transverse Mercator - that is more accurate and more GPS friendly than the Irish Grid Reference system. This will be used on the next generation of Irish OS maps.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button Valid CSS Valid HTML
Top of page | Feedback | About this site
© Copyright Tom FourWinds 2001-2008