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  • Memorial to Sir William Duff, governer of New South Wales. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-15.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-13.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-06.jpg
  • The procession departs amongst the Inca ruins at Sacsayhuamán. Inti Raymi "Festival of the Sun", Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru.
    Inti_Raymi_QL-22.tif
  • Rodadero, a huge glacially striated diorite rock opposite Saqsayhuaman, the Inca complex, during Inti Raymi (the festival of the sun). Cuzco, Peru, 2008
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Broken column memorial of Edward & Florence Grainuger from injuries received in the late Redfern Railway Accident 1894. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Broken column memorial of John & Caroline Starkey. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • Cross memorial in front of graves. The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-19.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-18.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-17.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-16.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-12.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-11.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-10.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-09.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-07.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-05.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-04.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-03.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-02.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-01.jpg
  • Playing on the rocks below the Inca flag at Sacsayhuamán the Inca ruins after watching Inti Raymi. Inti Raymi "Festival of the Sun", Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru.
    Inti_Raymi_QL-23.tif
  • The crowd swarms over a hill at Sacsayhuamán to view the ceremony moments after the police cordon was mobbed by local people. Inti Raymi "Festival of the Sun", Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru.
    Inti_Raymi_QL-21.tif
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The Waverley Cemetery opened in 1877 and is a cemetery located on top of the cliffs at Bronte in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. It is noted for its largely intact Victorian and Edwardian monuments. The cemetery contains the graves of many significant Australians including and the poet Henry Lawson and Australia's first Prime Minister, Sir Edmund Barton, who is interred at South Head...Architecturally, Waverley Cemetery is significant in that it showcases examples of Stonemasonry and funerary art dating back from the 19th century,with features (such as the gates, buildings and fencing) that due to their intact nature are considered of outstanding aesthetic value...Poetically, the juxtaposition of the tombs and memorials overlooking the pacific ocean of the sea makes the cemetery a unique place.
    Waverley-Cemetery-Pacific-Ocean-Sydn...jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-14.jpg
  • The remarkable wind-sculpted sandstone rock formations a short walk south from Bondi beach on the coast walk between Bondi & Coogee via Bronte beach. Sydney, New South, Wales, Australia. "Bondi" or "Boondi" is an Aboriginal word meaning water breaking over rocks or noise of water breaking over rocks.
    Bondi-Rocks-Sydney-Australia-08.jpg
  • A Peruvian family slides down rocks at Sacsayhuamán the Inca ruins after watching Inti Raymi . Inti Raymi "Festival of the Sun", Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Peru.
    Inti_Raymi_QL-24.tif
  • Churchyard Wall, North Side of Churchyard, Church of St Peter, Stanway, reused stone from church including stone coffin
    Cotswolds-9-14.jpg
  • Laggangairn (Laggangarn) Standing Stones. Two standing stones which may have originally been part of a larger stone circle. Christian crosses were added at a later date, probably in the 6th or 7th centuries AD.
    Southern-Uplands-Marks-of-Man-14.jpg
  • Laggangairn (Laggangarn) Standing Stones. Two standing stones which may have originally been part of a larger stone circle. Christian crosses were added at a later date, probably in the 6th or 7th centuries AD.
    Southern-Uplands-Marks-of-Man-13.jpg
  • Laggangairn (Laggangarn) Standing Stones. Two standing stones which may have originally been part of a larger stone circle. Christian crosses were added at a later date, probably in the 6th or 7th centuries AD.
    Southern-Uplands-Marks-of-Man-12.jpg
  • Magdalen Great Tower is a bell tower in Oxford, England. It is one of the oldest parts of Magdalen College, Oxford, situated directly in the High Street. Built of stone from 1492, when the foundation stone was laid,[1] its bells hung ready for use in 1505, and completed by 1509, it is an important element of the Oxford skyline. At 144 feet (44 m) high to the top of its pinnacles, it is the tallest building in Oxford. It dominates the eastern entrance to the city, towering overMagdalen Bridge and with good views from the Botanic Garden opposite.
    Magdalen-College-Tower-02.jpg
  • Magdalen Great Tower is a bell tower in Oxford, England. It is one of the oldest parts of Magdalen College, Oxford, situated directly in the High Street. Built of stone from 1492, when the foundation stone was laid,[1] its bells hung ready for use in 1505, and completed by 1509, it is an important element of the Oxford skyline. At 144 feet (44 m) high to the top of its pinnacles, it is the tallest building in Oxford. It dominates the eastern entrance to the city, towering overMagdalen Bridge and with good views from the Botanic Garden opposite.
    Magdalen-College-Tower-01.jpg
  • Magdalen Great Tower is a bell tower in Oxford, England. It is one of the oldest parts of Magdalen College, Oxford, situated directly in the High Street. Built of stone from 1492, when the foundation stone was laid,[1] its bells hung ready for use in 1505, and completed by 1509, it is an important element of the Oxford skyline. At 144 feet (44 m) high to the top of its pinnacles, it is the tallest building in Oxford. It dominates the eastern entrance to the city, towering overMagdalen Bridge and with good views from the Botanic Garden opposite.
    Magdalen-College-Tower-03.jpg
  • Belas Knap is a neolithic long barrow, situated on Cleeve Hill, near Cheltenham and Winchcombe, in Gloucestershire, England. It is in the care of English Heritage. "Belas" is possibly derived from the Latin word bellus, 'beautiful', which could describe the hill or its view. "Knap" is derived from the Old English for the top, crest, or summit of a hill...What appears to be the main entrance to the barrow, with intricate dry-stone walling and large limestone jambs and lintels is, in fact, a false one. The actual burial chambers are down the long East and West sides of the barrow and at its Southern foot. There are four burial chambers, two on opposite sides near the middle, one at the South-East angle and one at the South end. These are formed of upright stone slabs, linked by dry-stone walling and originally had corbelled roofs...This northern end measures about 26 metres wide and the barrow then tapers towards the south where it measures 17 metres in width and less than a metre in height. The whole of this trapezoid mound is around 70 metres in length.
    Belas-Knap-long-Barrow-06.jpg
  • Clach a' Mheirlich, or the "Thief's Stone”, a Pictish symbol stone at Rosskeen. Only the faintest outline of the carvings are visible. There’s a step symbol on one side & what could be a crescent with a pair of pincers on the other. Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    331-Nigg-AlnessBay-08.jpg
  • Incense burning in stone urn,  Nghia An Hoi Quan Pagoda on 678 Nguyen Trai Street in Cholon, Ho Chi Minh City
    Nghia An Hoi Quan Pagoda-01.jpg
  • Iron lacework, two storey Victorian Filigree terrace were built of stone and reflect the "standard" terrace type pattern commonly found on Darlinghurst and Paddington, with single span iron lace balcony, arched openings to ground floor and squared lintels to first floor...As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-nineteenth century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast ironor wrought iron. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture.
    Victorian-Filigree-terrace-architect...jpg
  • Victoria Fountain, designed by E.P. Warren and built in 1899 The Plain, Oxford. The Victoria Fountain is an octagonal stone structure with eight columns under a tiled roof, designed as a drinking fountain, with copper-lined basins and outside troughs for horses. The conical roof is topped with a cupola with its well-used four-faced clock and weather vane.
    Oxford-04.jpg
  • Circular stone Sheepfold, Scabcleuch Burn, Southern Uplands, Scotland
    Southern-Uplands-Marks-of-Man-29.jpg
  • Turf topped stone Sheepfold, Phawhope, Southern Uplands, Scotland
    Southern-Uplands-Marks-of-Man-28.jpg
  • Interior View of Chipping Campden Market Hall, Gloucestershire built from Cotswold Stone in 1627
    Cotswold-Way-Day-10-12.jpg
  • Interior View of Chipping Campden Market Hall, Gloucestershire built from Cotswold Stone in 1627
    Cotswold-Way-Day-10-11.jpg
  • Interior View of Roof beams and stone tiling  at Chipping Campden Market Hall, Gloucestershire
    Cotswold-Way-Day-10-10.jpg
  • Grass explodes into life next to the curb stone  of the A435 by the road at Seven Springs, Gloucestershire
    Cotswold-Way-Day-7-24.jpg
  • Cotswold stone coloured Neighbourhood watch sign by a new housing development, North Nibley
    Cotswold_Way_England-30.jpg
  • Detail of hunting scene which includes two swordsmen fighting one another, and a man with a crossbow on the western or landward-facing side of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-12.jpg
  • Tomb stone, St David’s Cathedral, Pembrokeshire.
    118-StDavids-PorthyDwfr-13.jpg
  • The typical Fujian Ha Chuong Hoi Quan Pagoda  is dedicated to Thien Hau, who was born in Fujian. The four carved stone pillars, wrapped in painted dragons, were made in China and brought to Vietnam by boat. There are interesting murals to each side of the main altar and impressive ceramic relief scenes on the roof.
    Ha-Chuong-Hoi-Quan-06.jpg
  • Stone Bench at St. Baldred's Cradle with Dunbar beyond, East Lothian, Scotland.
    366-North-Berwick-Dunbar-21.jpg
  • Abstract patterns based on triskeles (three in one spirals) on the western or landward-facing side of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    Easter-Ross-Print-Collection-13.jpg
  • Detail of the Pictish Nigg Stone dating from the end of the 8th century, Nigg Church, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    Easter-Ross-Print-Collection-04.jpg
  • The Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780 in its glazed shelter, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-15.jpg
  • Detail of the shaft of a highly ornate carving of a cross surrounded depictions of angels, animals and serpents on the eastern or seaward-facing of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-13.jpg
  • Detail of a highly ornate carving of a cross surrounded depictions of angels, animals and serpents on the eastern or seaward-facing of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-14.jpg
  • Abstract patterns based on triskeles (three in one spirals) on the western or landward-facing side of the Shandwick Stone a Pictish Cross-Slab dating from 780, Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-11.jpg
  • Detail of Pictish symbols of crescent and v-rod and double disc on the landward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone III, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-10.jpg
  • Detail of the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone III, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-07.jpg
  • Detail of the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone I, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-05.jpg
  • Detail of the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone II, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-06.jpg
  • The Christian cross on the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone III, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-04.jpg
  • Detail of the gorgeous interlocking spiral design surrounding the Pictish Dragon Stone dating from the 8th century and excavated in 1997. Tarbat Discovery Centre in Tarbat Old Parish Church, Portmahomack, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    329-Balnagal-Tarrel-05.jpg
  • Water & stone. Stacan Bana on the north of the Mhoine Peninsula, Sutherland, Scotland.
    313-Inverhope-Achininver-13.jpg
  • Stone underfoot, Loch na Mola, Sutherland, Scotland.
    304-LochArdbhair-DuartmoreBay-23.jpg
  • Bernera Barracks were built by the British to subdue the local population during the Jacobite Rising of 1715. This one was to guard the Skye crossing. Stone was plundered from the Glenelg Brochs according to an archaeological report (M E M Donaldson 1923), Glenelg, Scotland.
    278-Glenelg-Totaig-01.jpg
  • Shadow and stone. Rhu Peninsula, Scotland.
    268-Beasdale-Arisaig-07.jpg
  • Clach na Criche or the Wishing Stone in Morvern which once marked the border between gaelic and pictish lands. The cairns were built by mourners on funeral processions in memory of the dead. Highland, Scotland.
    252-LochAline-Auliston-03.jpg
  • Craignish Cist (ancient stone coffin box), Argyll, Scotland.
    236-Ardfern-BaghBan-06.jpg
  • The Lochmaben Stone, a glacial erratic and landmark for millennia. The site also marks the battle of Sark where in 1448, 3,000 English were killed fighting the Scots who allegedly lost only 26 men! Gretna, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.
    19-Dumfriesshire-Print-Collection-11.jpg
  • The Lochmaben Stone, a glacial erratic and landmark for millennia. The site also marks the battle of Sark where in 1448, 3,000 English were killed fighting the Scots who allegedly lost only 26 men! Gretna, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.
    174-Gretna-Annan-08.jpg
  • Dry stone walls constructed from boulders, above Llwyngwril, Gwynedd.
    128-Tywyn-Barmouth-06.jpg
  • Carreg Goffa, a memorial stone erected in 1897 to commemorate the defeat of the last attempted invasion of Britain in 1797,  Pembrokeshire.
    120-Penbwchdy-Fishguard-05.jpg
  • Dry stone wall near Pentire Point, Cornwall.
    078-Dinham-PortGaverne-04.jpg
  • Great Mew Stone from Wembury Point, Devon.
    051-Brixton-Plymouth-04.jpg
  • Gara Point & Great Mew Stone, Devon. Reme Head in Cornwall beyond.
    050-Stoke-Cross-Brixton-01.jpg
  • Stormy Skies above Long Stone & Bolt Tail, Devon.
    049-Aveton-Gifford-Stoke-Cross-03.jpg
  • Western cliff-tops and stone tipping bridge near Bowers Quarry, Portland, Dorset.
    035-Weymouth-Ferry-Bridge-15.jpg
  • Yantlet beacon with London Stone beyond marking the end of the Thames, Hoo Peninsula.
    004-Gravesend-Grain-24.jpg
  • Coast to Coast XII. Stone Breaker at Bunton Hush, Yorkshire Dales.
    Coast-to-Coast-Walk-12.jpg
  • Grave stone, Tende cemetery. Tende, France, 1992
    Drawing-Parallels-Quintin-Lake-Page-...jpg
  • Detail of the Pictish Nigg Stone dating from the end of the 8th century, Nigg Church, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    331-Nigg-AlnessBay-01.jpg
  • Detail of a hunting scene on the landward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone II, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-09.jpg
  • Detail of the landward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone I, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-08.jpg
  • The Christian cross on the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone I, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-02.jpg
  • The Christian cross on the seaward-facing side of the Cadboll Stone II, a Pictish Cross-Slab reconstruction by Barry Grove in 1998 (The original, dating from about 800 AD is in the Museum of Scotland), Tarbat Peninsula, Ross & Cromarty, Scotland.
    330-Tarrel-Nigg-03.jpg
  • The Lochmaben Stone and the Solway Firth, Gretna, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.
    174-Gretna-Annan-09.jpg
  • Stone cannon balls dating from the English siege of Harlech castle in 1409, Gwynedd.
    130-Harlech-Criccieth-02.jpg
  • Outer Stone, Combe Martin, Devon.
    087-BaggyPoint-Lynmouth-01.jpg
  • Mew Stone & Start Point, Devon.
    043-Paignton-Kingswear-16.jpg
  • Admiralty Quarry, operated by G Crook and Sons for extraction and crushing of limestone (Portland stone) Dorset.
    035-Weymouth-Ferry-Bridge-05.jpg
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