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Cloughmore

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Cloughmore Cloughmore Stone by Jonny Greentree Digital Photographer

Cloughmore stone


Cloughmore, known locally as "The Big Stone" (from Irish an Chloch Mhór, meaning 'the big stone'), is a huge granite boulder found about 1,000 feet (300 m) above the village of Rostrevor, County Down, Northern Ireland, on a relatively flat area of Silurian metasedimentary rock on the side of Slieve Martin overlooking Carlingford Lough and the Cooley peninsula in County Louth.

Contents

Cloughmore Cloughmore Wikipedia

Kilbroney forrest park and cloughmore stone


Features

Cloughmore oldwarrenpointforum View topic Cloughmore Stone amp the Great

The granite boulder, which has a calculated mass of 50 tonnes, is a glacial erratic, thought to have been transported from Scotland (from an island in Strathclyde bay) and deposited by retreating ice during the last Ice Age. The Cloughmore Stone is usually the venue at Easter where the residents of Rostrevor would usually go up and roll their Easter eggs down the hill. This has become sort of a tradition for the Rostrevor residents.

Legend

Cloughmore oldwarrenpointforum View topic Cloughmore Stone amp the Great

Local legend has it that the stone was thrown from the Cooley Mountains, on the other side of Carlingford Lough, by the giant Fionn mac Cumhaill.

Cloughmore httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Cloughmore FileCloughmore Stone Rostrevor July 2010 01JPG Wikimedia Commons

Cloughmore FileCloughmore Stone Rostrevor July 2010 03JPG Wikimedia Commons

Cloughmore FileCloughmore Stone Rostrevor July 2010 02JPG Wikimedia Commons

Cloughmore Rostrevor Cloughmore Stone Walk NI

References

Cloughmore Wikipedia


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