On a trip to Scotland I saw what looked as if they could have been stone wells in the undergrowth at the side of the road. They were circular, about 3 ft in diameter and 3ft high. They were topped by a circular stone about 6" thickness which covered the whole structure. The top lid had a design round the outside and at first it looked a bit like a car tyre. There were 2 of these 'monuments' about 6-8ft apart. They were not in line with the road but at an angle. They had obviously been there for a long time and no doubt before the road had been built. Can anybody please tell me what they were?
It might be a small cairn, or a Victorian installation for roadside drainage (manholes, storm drains etc). Without a real idea of �how old� or some pictures, it really is difficult to guess or point you in the right direction.
If the carvings in the stone seem similar to Pictish carvings, then the structure might have been the access chamber � or some say sacrificial chamber � for an Iron Age broch.
Google �Minehowe� or the underground cellar at �Broch of Gurness�. Unlikely, but you never know.