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  2. Connemara marble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connemara_marble

    Connemara marble or "Irish green" is a rare variety of green marble from Connemara, Ireland. It is used as a decoration and building material. It is used as a decoration and building material. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Its colour causes it to often be associated with the Irish identity, and for this reason it has been named the national gemstone of Ireland.

  3. Kilkenny marble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilkenny_Marble

    Richard III's tomb, of Swaledale white limestone on a Kilkenny black marble plinth. Kilkenny marble or Kilkenny black marble is a fine-grained very dark grey carboniferous limestone found around County Kilkenny in Ireland in the "Butlersgrove Formation", a Lower Carboniferous limestone that contains fossils of brachiopods, gastropods, crinoids and corals. [1]

  4. List of runestones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_runestones

    There is only a handful Elder Futhark (pre-Viking-Age) runestones (about eight, counting the transitional specimens created just around the beginning of the Viking Age). Årstad Stone (390–590 AD) Einang stone (4th century) Tune Runestone (250–400 AD) Kylver Stone (5th century) Möjbro Runestone (5th or early 6th century)

  5. Sculptured stones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sculptured_stones

    Four stones found in County Wexford, Ireland, known as the “Marigold Stones of Wexford'' have been found to have similar motifs from similar ones across the sea in Wales. The Irish stones are from Kilmuckridge , an old monastic site which used to be called Cill Mucrois. [ 8 ]

  6. Carved stone balls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carved_stone_balls

    Carved stone balls are petrospheres dated from the late Neolithic, to possibly as late as the Iron Age, mainly found in Scotland, but also elsewhere in Britain and Ireland. They are usually round and rarely oval, and of fairly uniform size at around 2 + 3 ⁄ 4 inches or 7 cm across, with anything between 3 and 160 protruding knobs on the surface.

  7. List of megalithic monuments in Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_megalithic...

    This is a list of megalithic monument on the island of Ireland. Megalithic monuments are found throughout Ireland , and include burial sites (including passage tombs , portal tombs and wedge tombs (or dolmens) ) and ceremonial sites (such as stone circles and stone rows ).

  8. Taaffeite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taaffeite

    Taaffeite (/ ˈ t ɑː f aɪ t /; BeMgAl 4 O 8) is a mineral, named after its discoverer Richard Taaffe (1898–1967) who found the first sample, a cut and polished gem, in October 1945 in a jeweler's shop in Dublin, Ireland. [4] [5] As such, it is the only gemstone to have

  9. Castlestrange Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castlestrange_stone

    The Castlestrange stone 3D model. The Castlestrange stone is located in the grounds of "Castlestrange House" near Athleague in County Roscommon, Ireland. [1] It is a granite boulder decorated with flowing spirals in the La Tène style, dating from the Iron Age period between 300 BC and 100 AD. [2] [3]