The Scotsman

Ancient secrets to be unlocked by 2,000-yearold hair

A handful of primitive strands found on the island of South Ronaldsay has archaeolog­ists extremely excited, writes Alison Campsie

- @alicampsie­75

Archaeolog­ists have made an “astonishin­g” find of 2,000-year-old hair on Orkney and there are hopes the strands will unlock rich detail about Iron Age life in Scotland

The discovery was made in an undergroun­d chamber of The Cairns broch on South Ronaldsay along with several other tantalisin­g finds, including a wooden bowl which may have been used to pass drink around a social gathering.

Martin Carruthers, lecturer at UHI Archaeolog­y Institute, said the hair was now being tested to confirm its compositio­n and could offer a new wave of informatio­n about ancient life in Northern Scotland.

He said: “We have made a number of astonishin­g finds at The Cairns, including strands of hair. My hunch is that it is human hair.

“We have around 20 strands. That is just what we could see and I am sure there will be other strands in the soil samples we have taken. It looks like human hair, it is pliable, if you blow on it, it moves. It is shiny, dark and measures around eight to 10 centimetre­s long so potentiall­y it records eight to 10 months of informatio­n about diet and the conditions people were living in.

“We are hoping it will help us build a very rich picture of what was going on around that building and really drill into the detail of the humans living there.

“We have recovered some human remains from the site in the past, such as a mandible and the odd tooth, but nothing as exciting as the hair, which gives us enormous potential to give us a more vivid picture of the humanity of the broch.”

The hair and the bowl were found within the subterrane­an chamber of the broch – a massive domestic roundhouse – known as ‘The Well’. Other finds include a piece of wood that resembles a tent peg, complete with notch. Part of the chamber was also covered in tiny pieces of twig, which may have been used as some sort of filter.

Several pieces of heather were also recovered, with a number of heads apparently woven together.

“That was amazing to see as it was human hands that have woven those pieces of heather together,” Mr Carruthers added.

The bowl recovered from the chamber is the oldest wooden bowl to be found in Orkney.

Made from alder, it a complete wood-turned bowl around 30 centimetre­s in diameter, with an elegant profile, a globular body and rounded base.

Although the object has split at some point in the past, it is complete and was being held together and protected by the muddy silts of the excavation.

Mr Carruthers said: ‘It’s miraculous that we’ve got this wooden vessel. It’s really quite unpreceden­ted preservati­on for a northern broch, and I still can’t believe it has turned up at The Cairns.

“In appearance, the bowl is similar in shape to certain of the pottery vessels of the period, and in particular it looks like the sort of vessel we suspect to have been used for serving food or drink. Its round base makes you think that it would have been required to be constantly held when full, and perhaps used socially, passed around from hand to hand, person to person.”

The bowl has been nicknamed the ‘Cairns Quaich’ or the ‘Cairns Cog’ after the traditiona­l drink served at Orkney weddings.

The Well features a series of stonecut steps descending into a stone chamber and was sealed when the broch was abandoned sometime between the late 1st and mid-2nd century AD. It is assumed that the items also date from this period, however, radiocarbo­n dating will be required to see if it could be even earlier than this time.

Around 20 such “wells” have been found beneath brochs with the conditions at The Cairns offering “incredible preservati­on” of wood and organic items. The silts within the well appear to have been sealed in an anaerobic state, with the base of the well remaining damp since the Iron Age.

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 ??  ?? 0 Finds at The Cairns on South Ronaldsay (top) could offer new insight into ancient life on Orkney. A fragment of the wooden bowl (above) and archaeolog­ist Martin Carruthers
0 Finds at The Cairns on South Ronaldsay (top) could offer new insight into ancient life on Orkney. A fragment of the wooden bowl (above) and archaeolog­ist Martin Carruthers

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