Anomalous stone group, Cartrongolan, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Stone Monuments
On a steep north-west-facing slope in Cartrongolan, County Longford, a single sandstone upright leans into the landscape, its triangular profile narrowing toward the top as though it has been slowly pressing itself into the hillside for centuries.
It stands roughly 1.2 metres high and just over 1.3 metres wide, aligned along an east-north-east to west-south-west axis. It is, in the most precise sense of the word, anomalous. Nobody can say with confidence what it is.
What makes the situation stranger still is what is no longer there. Local information holds that at least three other uprights once stood in close proximity to this stone, forming what might have been a group of some kind, whether a megalithic monument, a field boundary marker, or something else entirely. Those stones were destroyed in the 1950s, and because no record was made of their arrangement relative to the surviving upright, the geometry of the original grouping is lost. Without that spatial relationship, the usual interpretive frameworks, alignment with celestial events, comparison with known monument types, contextual patterning, simply cannot be applied. The stone that remains offers no straightforward answer on its own.