The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Viking canal rediscover­ed

Heritage: Researcher­s uncover fascinatin­g evidence of long lost waterway

- BY JOHN ROSS

An investigat­ion has revealed a long lost Viking waterway running through mainland Orkney, which once provided access to the stronghold of the islands’ ancient rulers.

It is believed the ancient “highway” ran more than 10 miles, connecting a series of canals from the North Atlantic to Scapa Flow.

That waterway provided an essential trade route to allow the Vikings to haul boats and heavy goods, such as grain, and collect

“It is fascinatin­g to see how the investigat­ion can be verified”

rents and taxes from wealthy estates.

The findings are the result of a collaborat­ion between the universiti­es of the Highlands and Islands, St Andrews and Wales and will be published in the Journal of Wetland Archaeolog­y.

Orkney was a key area of power for Norse earls from the ninth to 12th centuries.

Old Norse place names connected to the sea and boats in the middle of Orkney’s mainland provided clues to the waterways that have disappeare­d due to later drainage projects and changes in climate and sea level.

They included Greenay, meaning shallow waters, and Knarston, derived from the words for a transport vessel and a farm or homestead where these vessels were moored.

Researcher­s using remote sensing geophysica­l mapping and sediment samples were able to rediscover a series of now infilled channels from the Loch of Harray to the lochs of Sabiston and Boardhouse towards the earls’ seat of power in Birsay.

They say the results could help historians and archaeolog­ists find more evidence of water transport in the Viking Age and Late Norse period in the isles.

Similar navigable waterways are known elsewhere in Scotland, including at Rubh an Dunain in Skye.

Dr Richard Bates, of the school of earth and environmen­tal sciences at St Andrews University, said: “It is quite fascinatin­g to see how the scientific investigat­ion can be verified by the toponymic study.

“I would not have believed that both parts of the evidence would have survived nearly a millennium of change.”

Dr Alexandra Sanmark, of the Institute for Northern Studies at the University of the Highlands and Islands, added: “I am delighted with the outcome, as multiple pieces of written and landscape evidence suggested the existence of the waterway.”

 ??  ?? HISTORIC FIND: A researcher at work on the study which found evidence of a Viking waterway running through mainland Orkney
HISTORIC FIND: A researcher at work on the study which found evidence of a Viking waterway running through mainland Orkney
 ??  ?? Researcher­s think the waterway connected the North Atlantic and Scapa Flow
Researcher­s think the waterway connected the North Atlantic and Scapa Flow

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