Summary
Rock art comprising at least 26 panels on sandstone outcrops, of Neolithic/early Bronze Age date (approximately 3800 BC to 1500 BC).
Reasons for Designation
The prehistoric rock art on Weetwood Moor 1 km south of Clavering is scheduled for the following principal reasons:
* Survival: despite their susceptibility to natural weathering, the panels are reasonably well preserved;
* Documentation: ritual and religious sites of Prehistoric Britain including rock art are relatively scarce and lack contemporary documentation, hence the value of the archaeological remains is enhanced as they provide our only evidence of the belief system and society which produced them;
* Diversity: a wide variety of motifs are represented ranging from the more common forms such as cups and rings through to more unusual motifs or complex groupings of motifs;
* Potential: these survivals will contribute to our knowledge of prehistoric society through study of the individual motifs and through an increased understanding of the circumstances in which rock art was created and the sites used;
* Group value: taken as a group, they will enhance both our understanding of the inter-relationships between individual panels and their relationship to the wider landscape. The panels lie in the vicinity of nearby scheduled prehistoric rock art at Weetwood and Fowberry.
History
The term prehistoric rock art is most commonly applied to a specific style of carvings created in the Neolithic and early Bronze Age (approximately 3800 BC to 1500 BC). This type of carving shares a limited set of motifs, with numerous variations around the main themes, and is found throughout northern Europe in a wide range of contexts, from isolated natural outcrops to burial cairns and standing stones. The most common form of motifs are the simple ‘cup mark’ (a shallow bowl-shaped depression a few centimetres across ) and the ‘cup and ring’ (a cup mark surrounded by one or more concentric circular grooves); many carvings also incorporate or are framed within linear grooves. Motifs may occur singly, in small groups, or may cover extensive areas of rock surface. The exact meaning of the designs remains unknown and a wide range of interpretations have been suggested, but they appear to be abstract and held some unknown, possibly sacred meaning for those who created and observed them. Over 5000 separate rock art sites are known in Britain of which more than half are in England and while some examples do occur further south, they are mainly confined to the upland areas of the north.
Some of the more prominent carved rocks on Weetwood Moor have been known about since the mid C19, and are described in early C20 works and by Ordnance Survey field surveyors in the later 1950s. More recently in the 1980s they were recorded by Stan Beckensall who identified many more examples. The rock art on the moor was resurveyed by The Northumberland and Durham Rock Art Project (NADRAP) in the late 1990s and early 2000s. One group of carved rocks on Weetwood Moor is already scheduled as an ancient monument (Westwood Bank cup and ring marked rock, NHLE entry 1006559), and in addition to rock art, Weetwood Moor retains evidence of further prehistoric activity in the form of scattered round cairns; one pair of round cairns is also scheduled (Westwood Moor round cairns, NHLE entry 1006454).
Details
Principal elements: Prehistoric rock art comprising at least 26 sandstone panels, of Neolithic/early Bronze Age date (approximately 3800 BC to 1500 BC).
Description: at least 26 sandstone outcrops are visible, inscribed with prehistoric rock art motifs, but it is considered that further rock art remains buried in and around the exposed outcrops. The rock art under assessment here has traditionally been separated into five main groups; the individual panels are not described in detail here, and reference should be made to the online database England's Rock Art (ERA) incorporating the Beckensall Archive.
The first and most northerly group comprises six separate sites (ERA 129-30; 133-36), all are on sloping sandstone outcrops and two have natural fissures and cracks. Recorded motifs include single cups, some with penannulars and ducts and some linked together by grooves; a particularly unusual motif comprises four individual cups linked together by a cross-shaped groove. One of the rocks is recorded as having very clear pick marks visible.
The second group situated immediately south west of the first, comprises thirteen separate panels (ERA 132,138-40,143,145-7,149-50,152-4); all are on slightly sloping sites, mostly with natural cracks and fissures. Recorded motifs are generally individual cups and cups with penannulars or multiple rings and arcs and some have linear grooves. One rock has a circular cluster of twelve small cupmarks and another has a deeply incised cup with a squared off ring.
The third group lies to the north west of the second group and comprises two separate outcrops. The first (ERA 142) has a horizontal and smooth surface and may have been specially selected for a complex series of motifs; it has natural cracks running north to south and the pick markings are clear. The eastern side of the rock has three motifs set in a line comprising a cup and duct and five penannulars at the south end; the duct continues to join the outer circle of a cup surrounded by a ring and three penannulars immediately to its north; the latter also has a duct aligned eastward. A faint groove links the motif with the third and largest motif, a large cup with five penannulars which flatten out at the north. A serpentine groove from the central cup of this motif bends to the west to join with a similar groove emanating from the central cup of a fourth motif surrounded by a ring and three penannulars. To the east of the largest figure is a small cup with a duct running SE, and two penannulars. A fifth motif comprises a cup at the centre of two rings. Immediately to the east of the linear grouping of three motifs there is a cup with groove surrounded by two penannulars, and at least two small cups and other cups are thought to be present. The second outcrop (ERA 137) contains a clear cup and ring with a partial outer ring.
The fourth group is situated to the west of the third, and comprises five separate outcrops (ERA 141, 148, 151, 158 & 144). Each outcrop bears the remains of a small number of motifs comprising simple small cups, cups with single rings and sometimes with grooves, penannulars or arcs; one large cup and ring motif appears to have the faint traces of a second ring.
The fifth site situated slightly north of the fourth group, comprises a single large outcrop (ERA 127). Eleven single cups are scattered across the rock surface, which also contains a complex of large motifs comprising a cup with groove and a penannular, four cups with grooves and multiple penannulars and a multiple arc.
Extent of scheduling: this is irregular in shape and is defined to incorporate all positively identified panels. It measures approximately 100m N-S by 210m E-W at its greatest extent as depicted in the accompanying map extract.