The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Archaeolog­ical dig unearths hidden history at Perth farm

Tools up to 12,000 years old shed new light on how communitie­s lived

- JAMIE BUCHAN jabuchan@thecourier.co.uk

A hidden haul of ancient hunting tools has been found at a Perthshire farm.

The discovery of more than 700 pieces, some up to 12,000 years old, has helped shed new light on how some of Scotland’s earliest communitie­s lived.

Archaeolog­ists began a hunt for evidence of Mesolithic settlement­s at Freeland Farm, south of Perth, in winter 2014.

Having worked on the fields over three consecutiv­e seasons, the team has now published its findings.

The pieces found on the farm date from between 9800BC and 4000BC, and are made of local carnelian stone.

The vast scale of the discovery suggests that the riverside site was home to several small settlement­s.

The tools were used for hunting and skinning animals, as well as making food, clothing, bedding and tents.

It is thought the distinctiv­e brown colour of the stone material may have also helped define the local population’s identity.

Archaeolog­ist Torben Ballin, who co-authored a report on the find, said: “It is difficult to say how the Mesolithic people of Freeland Farm perceived their carnelian, but it is likely that the brown colour had a special meaning to them, for example as a means of identifyin­g themselves as belonging to a specific social group.”

He said: “They may have seen themselves, and been seen by huntergath­erer groups in neighbouri­ng territorie­s, as ‘those with brown tool kits’ – just like people on Arran may have seen themselves as ‘those with black tool kits’ and people on Rhum as ‘those with green tool kits’.”

The three-year project followed on from research by Dundee University, which identified likely fishing and hunting grounds close to Bridge of Earn.

Sophie Nicol, historic environmen­t manager for the Perth and Kinross Heritage Trust (PKHT), said: “A number of fields around the Tay estuary were investigat­ed by volunteers through fieldwalki­ng.

“Of these, the fields at Freeland Farm yielded the numericall­y largest lithic assemblage – 707 pieces – and offered the greatest potential to shed light on the late Mesolithic of the Tay estuary.”

The report has been dedicated to the memory of dedicated PKHT member Tony Simpson, who died in February.

The trust said the discovery was highly significan­t, as there are very few Mesolithic sites on the patch. PKHT will offer further insight into the area’s earliest settlers at a conference at Perth’s Station Hotel on August 30.

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 ??  ?? Top: Volunteers at Freeland Farm, Perthshire; Above: Map of the settlement site; Right: Pieces made from local carnelian stone with its distinctiv­e brown colour.
Top: Volunteers at Freeland Farm, Perthshire; Above: Map of the settlement site; Right: Pieces made from local carnelian stone with its distinctiv­e brown colour.
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