Standing stone, Bunduff, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Stone Monuments
Among the sand dunes at Bunduff in County Sligo, a modest standing stone sits in quiet proximity to something that raises more questions than it answers.
At just 0.6 metres high and 0.65 metres long at the base, it is not the kind of monument that draws a crowd. What makes it quietly interesting is its relationship to a nearby stone row, a prehistoric arrangement of two standing stones, located roughly 32 metres to the east-south-east. The single stone may not have been placed here in isolation at all.
Stone rows are a feature of the Irish and broader Atlantic prehistoric landscape, their precise purpose still debated, though alignment with astronomical events, territorial marking, and ceremonial use have all been proposed over the years. What complicates the picture at Bunduff is that the solitary stone, orientated on a NNW to SSE axis, may function as an outlier of the two-stone row nearby. An outlier, in this context, refers to a stone placed at some distance from a row or circle, possibly to extend or anchor its alignment, or to mark a related but distinct position in the wider arrangement. The spacing of around 32 metres between this stone and the row is neither so close as to make the connection obvious nor so distant as to rule it out, which is precisely why the question remains open.