The Herald

Discovery of one hazelnut helps crack mystery of ancient Scots

Signs of life dating back to the Mesolithic period have been found on a Scots country estate. Martin Williams reports

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AMATEUR archaeolog­ists have uncovered ancient Scots’ love of hazelnuts while shining a light on 10,000 years of history in one part of Scotland.

Signs of life dating back to the Mesolithic period have been found on a dig on

National Trust for Scotland’s Threave Garden and Estate in Dumfries and Galloway.

A tiny burnt hazelnut shell has been found by volunteers on an archaeolog­ical dig that has been dated to between 8,547 and 8,312 BC.

Hazelnuts were a favourite snack of Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, according to archaeolog­ists.

The Mesolithic period is the term given by archaeolog­ists for the time from about 8,000 BC when the first people came to Scotland from Europe.

These were the hunter-gatherers: nomads who lived in temporary camps, hunted animals like deer and fish, and lived off the plentiful supplies of fruits and berries found in the forests.

The Galloway Glens community archaeolog­y project Can You Dig It found the shell during a dig in 2019 at Little Wood Hill, which dates back to the Iron Age.

The discovery came four years after a dig on Skye revealed the remains of hazelnuts eaten by some of the island’s earliest inhabitant­s.

Since then, some of the carbonised material recovered has been sent away for radiocarbo­n dating at the Scottish Universiti­es Environmen­tal Research Centre (SUERC).

A sample found by the volunteers at the end of a ditch, which marked the eastern side of an entrance, has been dated to between AD 75 and AD 214 – firmly within the Iron Age, while the hazelnut was dated to the Mesolithic period.

Derek Alexander, head of archaeolog­y for the National Trust for Scotland (NTS), said: “Over the years we have gradually built up an understand­ing of past human activity at Threave throughout prehistory and history.

“This radiocarbo­n date for Mesolithic activity is really exciting, as it is the first evidence we have from this time and is the earliest date recovered at Threave so far.”

Hazelnuts have been discovered on prehistori­c sites across the country and have been establishe­d as a favourite snack of the Mesolithic people.

The people of Galloway at

that time would have lived nomadicall­y, moving between water and food sources as they became available.

Traces of human habitation in Scotland go back to about 12,000 BC, within the Upper Palaeolith­ic, but a period known as the Loch Lomond Stadial saw a dramatic climatic downturn in Scotland around 10,900 BC.

This abrupt return to severe cold conditions caused the regrowth of glaciers and is considered likely to have caused a complete depopulati­on of Scotland during this time.

By about 9,700 BC, however, the glaciers and ice-sheets had receded and human life began to return to Scotland. Experts said it is possible the people who burnt this nutshell at Threave could have been among the first to re-populate the country.

Claire Williamson of Rathmell Archaeolog­y, who is delivering Can You Dig It for Galloway Glens, said: “The results from these two dates continue to add to the surprises that have already come from this little-known site.

“Having the Iron Age date of the enclosure confirmed was what we were hoping for, but to also have this small indication of

Mesolithic life on the estate is amazing. This could not have been possible without the hard work of the volunteers, whose enthusiasm for the archaeolog­y never faltered.

“It’s great to see how, even at this stage, the results of their hard work continue to add to

our archaeolog­ical knowledge of the area.”

The site at Little Wood Hill was first revealed to date back to the Iron Age following work carried out under Mr Alexander on an NTS Thistle Camp in 2014.

Dr Samuel Gallacher,

operations manager for Threave Garden and Estate, said: “We love to surprise our many visitors with unexpected discoverie­s and stories at Threave and finding out about this new evidence of our very ancient history will no doubt fascinate many.”

This is the first evidence from this time

 ??  ?? Claire Williamson of Rathmell Archaeolog­y working with volunteers at Threave Garden and Estate
Claire Williamson of Rathmell Archaeolog­y working with volunteers at Threave Garden and Estate
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 ??  ?? The Can You Dig It project in Galloway Glens
The Can You Dig It project in Galloway Glens
 ??  ?? Volunteers hard at work at Threave Garden
Volunteers hard at work at Threave Garden

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