This tomb is outside the area of the main group of tombs near the visitors' centre and is in a private field beside the road.
Undoubtedly this tomb is the most beautiful of all those outside the main area. On a low artificial flat mound, with a steep slope on its west side, there are 37 stones that form the kerb for the cairn that once covered the cross-shaped passage tomb in the centre of the circle. No other tomb in the complex at Carrowmore has a similar feature. The passage , which is aligned to northwest (315°) nearly towards the Knocknarea, is 1.80 metres long and 65 centimetres wide. The chamber at the end of the passage is aligned to southeast (135°) and is 1 metre long and 90 centimetres wide. Another chamber is to northeast (60°) and is 1 metre long and 1.40 metres wide, but several stones have been displaced. The third chamber is aligned to southwest (225°) and 1.35 metres long and 70 centimetres wide. Around the passage tomb there's a second inner circle, made with smaller stones. The outer diameter along the east-west axis is of 15 metres. The excavations revealed the presence of many cremated and unburned bones, along with teeth, fragments of ivory, pottery and a flint knife. The radiocarbon analyses dated this site as old as 3900 BC.
The Tomb 26 is about 75 metres to the northeast (75°) in the same field.
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