The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Digging for victory: Archaeolog­ists on how five big finds have lit up the past

- By Mike Merritt news@sundaypost.com

They have opened a door on the past to shine a light on how Scots lived thousands of years ago.

The five most important archaeolog­ical discoverie­s of the past 12 months – from ancient carvings to lost townships – have been hailed by experts.

Each year, archaeolog­ists and volunteers uncover new details about Scotland’s past through fieldwork, post-excavation analysis and research.

Now,the Dig It! project – co-ordinated by the Society of Antiquarie­s of Scotland and primarily funded by Historic Environmen­t Scotland – has said prehistori­c animal carvings, a 5,000-year-old monument and an illicit whisky distillery are among the landmark discoverie­s.

Excavation­s at Rubha Port-an t-seilich on Islay began after pigs exposed flint artefacts and have revealed that Mesolithic foragers repeatedly returned to make camp there between 6,000 and 9,200 years ago. “These foragers may, however, have been following in the footsteps of Ice Age pioneers (around 12,000 years ago),” said Dig It!.

“Archaeolog­ists have previously uncovered evidence below the Mesolithic layers that suggests earlier occupation, but the 2021 excavation found further artefacts to suggest the layer is Late Glacial, as well as additional Mesolithic discoverie­s including fireplaces. These finds suggest an Ice Age campsite might remain in place below the Mesolithic deposits, which would be the first for Scotland.”

In May, Historic Environmen­t Scotland announced animal carvings, thought to be between 4,000 and 5,000 years old, had been discovered inside a tomb in Argyll.

They include depictions of two male red deer with antlers, and three other quadrupeds, possibly juvenile deer. Deer would have been valuable as a source of meat and hides, with bones and antlers used for tools, and may have had an important symbolic role in prehistory. The carvings were discovered inside Dunchraiga­ig Cairn in Kilmartin Glen by Hamish Fenton and their authentici­ty confirmed by experts from Scotland’s Rock Art Project.

“These are the earliest known animal carvings in Scotland, and the first clear examples of deer carvings from the Neolithic or Early Bronze Age in the whole of the UK,” said Dig It!.

In August, archaeolog­ists and volunteers travelled to the Isle of Arran and teamed up with members of the community to investigat­e a possible 5,000-year-old cursus monument.

Previously detected in an aerial laser scan by Historic Environmen­t Scotland in 2017, these Neolithic monuments usually consist of a long avenue formed by two parallel mounds of earth or wooden posts which would have taken decades to

build. At over half a mile long, the vast amount of resources required to create this kind of monument suggests they were incredibly important to prehistori­c residents.

“It’s believed they were used for ritual purposes, perhaps with procession­s of people travelling from one end to the other. In this case the journey would have culminated with spectacula­r views over the Machrie Moor timber and stone circle complex,” said Dig It!.

In the Highlands, the Lost Inverlael community archaeolog­y project run by Ullapool Museum has been learning more about an extensive township that was cleared in 1819. Earlier this year they discovered a rare example of a well-preserved illicit whisky distilling still. The site included a visible drain and hearth with the water source still trickling down the rock face.

According to leading Highland whisky distilling expert Darroch Bratt, it is unusual to find “extremely clear features demonstrat­ing exactly how the process was conducted” but most stages are represente­d at this site which could date back to the late 18th Century.

Finally, a significan­t link to football stadiums today, such as turnstiles and season tickets, originated at the first Hampden stadium in Glasgow, which opened in 1873.

After 10 years, it was closed due to the building of a railway line and was lost. Last year, archaeolog­ists and volunteers headed to where it was believed the stadium stood and revealed evidence that confirmed the location, including of the foundation­s of the pavilion where the first footballer­s to play for Queen’s Park FC and the Scotland national team would have changed, and artefacts dropped by supporters including beer bottles and clay pipes.

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 ?? ?? The layout of the carvings of red deer believed to be about 5,000 years old and found inside Dunchraiga­ig cairn in Kilmartin Glen in Argyll, left; Dr Tertia Barnett, top, at the cairn with a graphic showing the carvings, above
The layout of the carvings of red deer believed to be about 5,000 years old and found inside Dunchraiga­ig cairn in Kilmartin Glen in Argyll, left; Dr Tertia Barnett, top, at the cairn with a graphic showing the carvings, above

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