A closer view of Lelant's rectangular churchyard, which sits around 1.5 metres above the surrounding ground.pic.twitter.com/pPdX5n6AFG
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Unfortunately, only a drawing of the Chi-Rho stone from Cape Cornwall survives (right; left=Phillack); the stone was taken to St Just church where it was displayed for a while, until a Rector who objected to it as too 'Roman Catholic' had it thrown down a well in the 19thC!pic.twitter.com/2FEWnTgLHf
Trencrom Hill overlooking St Ives Bay, Cornwall, as seen from the opposite side of the bay at Godrevy.pic.twitter.com/L9smj7t0hh
A view through the probably Iron Age east entrance to Trencrom hillfort, with Carn Brea (likewise reoccupied in the Iron Age) visible through it on the horizon; between the two is the Hayle Estuary and the small Iron Age hillfort of Carnsew, mentioned above.pic.twitter.com/wbwA2uIFOx
Another view of the Iron Age ramparts of Carnsew Hillfort, Hayle, thought to have been reused in the early medieval period.pic.twitter.com/ks9lGwEePW
Looking along the railway line at Lelant towards the site of the buried early medieval chapel & late/post-Roman burial site that was encountered under the dunes of Lelant Towans in 1875 during the construction of the railway link to St Ives.pic.twitter.com/yqvfVehHVv
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