
Details | 305372 | Site | Coflein
The Harold Stone is an erect monolith, comprising a rectangular-sectioned slab, 0.9m wide and up to 0.43m broad at its base, generally tapering to blunt point 1.78m tall.
Details | 221159 | Site | Coflein
The stone alignment is famously depicted on Lady Probert's Sundial in St Nicolas's Church, Trellech (NPRN 220997) showing the antiquities of the village; the three stones are carved in relief...
Maen Mawr, Standing Stone;Stone Alignment | Coflein
This standing stone is the largest stone in a short alignment of stones, and one element in a complex of monuments (NPRN 95) which includes a stone circle (412996) and an avenue of low...
Details | 301392 | Site | Coflein
The Bodvoc Stone now forms part of the Margam Stone Collection (NPRN 94512), housed in the old school house, Margam, but originally stood as a monument stone on one of a line of Bronze Age …
Details | 305944 | Site | Coflein
The stone lies in a water-filled hollow measuring about 3m across at the east end of a horse-shoe shaped enclosure bank that projects away from the stone, possibly the remains of a Bronze Age...
Details | 302887 | Site | Coflein
Arthog standing stone was originally described on early OS maps as a stone circle, but Gresham suggests the spread of the stones may suggest the remains of a cairn circle. Six stones...
Details | 303055 | Site | Coflein
The stone was moved from its original site by 1773, c.1830 set in current location, and later removed to the National Museum of Wales and a replica erected within a railed enclosure, by 1973 only...
Details | 302327 | Site | Coflein
At the centre of the monument is a rather dumpy erect boulder or standing stone 1.2m high, set in a 0.6m deep stone hole. This is set at the centre of a carefully constructed cairn ring, 2.0m...
Details | 302384 | Site | Coflein
Maen Llwyd standing stone is an erect monolith 3.1m high. It is roughly square in section, about 1.0-1.3m across, and rises to a point from a shoulder about mid way up.
Details | 84541 | Site | Coflein
Maen Llia is a massive slab of conglomerate stone located at the head of a pass between Fan Llia and Fan Nedd. It measures 3.61m high, 2.75m wide and 0.46m thick.