Macalister (1945, 11, no.8) records a 'limestone slab', 1.32 (above ground) x 0.61 x 0.15m, bearing 'a cross pattée in a circle, pocked' on one face and possibly 'a badly worn and weathered' ogham inscription on the 'sinister edge' (more than half spalled away). He very tentatively read ...OVI MAQI and was unable to verify Rhys's (1898, 232) suggestion of CORBAGNI. According to Kelly (1897, 185), who first noted the inscription, the stone was found lying flat but was re-erected where it was found with more than half buried in the sand.