Most of the stones of which it was built have been removed, probably to build the walls of the houses which, in their turn, were abandoned by their owners. One house - at left in the picture - was even built on top of the rubble that formed part of the cairn structure.
This diagram of the site, adapted from the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland's 'Argyll Vol 3' gives some idea of the site but put this into the hands of a talented artist like Rachael Kidd and....
....she brings the site to life.
Rachael was commissioned to make this drawing by the Ardnamurchan History & Heritage Association, for it to be included in the booklet it has produced about Camas nan Geall - but it has had another, unexpected bonus. While the literature describes it as a cairn of the Hebridean type, Rachael's drawing suggests it is more akin to a 'court tomb' of the type found at Tamnyrankin in Northern Ireland - link here.
For a full description of the history of the Camas nan Geall cairn, go to AHHA's Heritage Ardnamurchan website here.
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