The Scotsman

Scotland’s best archaeolog­ical discoverie­s of the past year

- By ALISON CAMPSIE alison.campsie@jpimedia.com

From a massive hilltop Pictish fort to hundreds of medieval skeletons found beneath the streets of Edinburgh, a number of key archaeolog­ical digs in 2020 have helped to further our understand­ing of the people and places of Scotland through time.

Dig It! – a centrepoin­t of informatio­n on archaeolog­y Scotland – has put forward three key projects which have illuminate­d previously unknown parts of Scotland’s past. While the pandemic led to many excavation­s coming to a standstill, these studies were still able able to unearth exciting discoverie­s.

They are:

1. Scotland’s largest Pictish site In May, one of the largest ancient settlement­s ever discovered in Scotland was identified with up to 4,000 people thought to have lived or gathered in hundreds of houses on the summit of Tap O’ Noth in Aberdeensh­ire during the Pictish era.

The hilltop is now known to have been a hive of activity around 1,700 to 1,400 years ago.

The breakthrou­gh was made this year when archaeolog­ists at Aberdeen University’s Leverhulme Comparativ­e Kingship Project radiocarbo­n dated samples of organic matter earlier taken from the summit.

These results were combined with drone surveys and laser technology which showed that there were hundreds of hut platforms within the fort – described as “potentiall­y verging on urban in scale”.

2. Scotland’s oldest woven cloth Evidence of a woven Neolithic cloth was found at the Ness of Brodgar in Orkney.

Organic material from prehistory does not often survive, but the breakthrou­gh was made after the fabric left an impression in the wet clay of a pot that was made 5,000 years ago.

The impression­s are thought to have been made by the potter’s clothing at the time.

The impression­s were discovered by a volunteer as part of a University of the Highlands and Islands project.

3. Stories from medieval Edinburgh

Fascinatin­g stories from Leith were uncovered when archaeolog­ists began unearthing skeletons and artefacts from a medieval cemetery to make way for the expansion of the Edinburgh Tram line to Newhaven.

More than 350 burials, which could date back to as far back as 1300, were discovered with the finds building on earlier results from a dig in 2008.

Meanwhile, a wealth of other artefacts were found at the South Leith Parish Cemetery, including a rare cannonball that may have been fired during the 1559-60 Siege of Leith. The bones from the fins of an adult sperm whale, which dated to around 1800, were also found in a nod to Leith’s industrial whaling past.

Dr Jeff Sanders, Project Manager at the Society of Antiquarie­s of Scotland’s Dig It! project, said: “Archaeolog­y is all about discoverin­g Scotland’s stories and these are just some of the new chapters that have been added despite the pandemic, with other finds ranging from a major Iron Age village in Aberdeensh­ire to a "lost" medieval bridge in the Scottish Borders.

"As S cotland’s Archaeolog y Strateg y reminds us, archaeolog y is for ever yone, so we hope you’ve been inspired to get involved in 2021 when it’s safe.”

 ?? PICTURE: SCOTT PIKE & NESS OF BRODGAR
PICTURE: SCOTT PIKE & NESS OF BRODGAR ?? 0 Evidence of the oldest piece of cloth in Scotland, which dates from around 5,000 years ago, was found at Ness of Brodgar on Orkney.
PICTURE: SCOTT PIKE & NESS OF BRODGAR PICTURE: SCOTT PIKE & NESS OF BRODGAR 0 Evidence of the oldest piece of cloth in Scotland, which dates from around 5,000 years ago, was found at Ness of Brodgar on Orkney.

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