. . . . "1072160540"^^ . "Almsworthy Common is a small area of unenclosed land in Exmoor, south-western England. It contains a number of archaeological sites. It is about 2 miles north of Exford roughly 0.5 km2 in area, and the Macmillan Way West passes through it, as does the parish boundary between Exford and Porlock. It reaches a height of 453 metres. Stone settings are arrangements of upright stones either scattered randomly or in a roughly geometric pattern. They are the most common form of stone monument found on Exmoor, with 57 conclusively recorded examples in this area. A large number are known to have existed but have been destroyed. 560 m south west of Chetsford Bridge is a stone alignment. The archaeologist Aubrey Burl stated that an \"eye of faith\" was needed to identify \"either a ring or a set of rows.\"The Ordnance Survey list it as a \"Stone Circle\" on their map. In his 1970 study of the archaeology of Exmoor, Leslie Grinsell thought that it was \"probably\" a stone circle. The common is also the site of one of the best preserved hut circles on Exmoor."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Almsworthy Common is a small area of unenclosed land in Exmoor, south-western England. It contains a number of archaeological sites. It is about 2 miles north of Exford roughly 0.5 km2 in area, and the Macmillan Way West passes through it, as does the parish boundary between Exford and Porlock. It reaches a height of 453 metres. The common is also the site of one of the best preserved hut circles on Exmoor."@en . . "-3.655900001525879"^^ . . . . . . "56180237"^^ . . . "Almsworthy Common"@en . . . . "POINT(-3.6559000015259 51.162700653076)"^^ . . . . . "51.16270065307617"^^ . . . . . "3694"^^ . . . "51.1627 -3.6559" . .
  NODES