Cove (standing stones)
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Cove is a term used to describe a tightly concentrated group of large standing stones found in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. Coves are square or rectangular in plan and seem to have served as small enclosures within other henge, stone circle or avenue features. They consist of three or four orthostats placed together to give the impression of a box. An opening between the stones, oriented south east is also a feature.
They may have developed from the elaborate facades that fronted Neolithic long barrows although their original function is unknown.
Examples include:
- The Longstones in Wiltshire;
- The cove at Avebury Henge in Wiltshire;
- The cove at Stanton Drew in Somerset and
- The cove at Mount Pleasant in Dorset
External links
- Coves, structural enigmas of the Neolithic (http://www.arch.soton.ac.uk/Research/Avebury/Longstones00/Longstones00.html)