The Sunday Post (Inverness)

They came, they saw, they scurried: Ancient bones let scientists chart rats’ arrival to the Roman invasion

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

The invading Romans might have built more roads but the rodents on board made inroads of their own, according to scientists detailing the arrival of black rats in Britain.

Tiny skeletons dating back thousands of years are offering archaeolog­ists insight about how the rats arrived as stowaways on Roman galleys.

Then after the first influx died off when volcanic eruptions in 536AD triggered a three-year winter, they returned 250 years later aboard Viking longships.

Researcher­s from across Europe have now joined forces in an internatio­nal collaborat­ion to find archaeolog­ical remains of the black rat. They have dated the remains they have found as from Roman times, right up to the 18th Century.

Dr David Orton is among the specialist­s tracing the arrival and survival of the rats and said ships

were key to their migration.

“The rats would be brought here, either by invaders, traders or shipwrecks and were at their happiest on wooden ships,” said Orton, of York University.

“We know that rats spread along with humans, and we suspect that the expansion of the Roman Empire could have been such an event.

“Archaeolog­ical research shows that black rats arrived twice, probably firstly with the Romans’ successful invasion in 43AD.”

Dr Stephen Harrison, senior lecturer in Viking archaeolog­y at Glasgow University, told The Sunday Post: “Rats change after the Viking age. Indeed with each wave of invaders we got their wildlife and fauna.

“There has been some good work on the genetic legacy of Scandinavi­an settlers in Scotland with humans and what makes David Orton’s work really interestin­g is the discovery of the accidental immigratio­n of animals.

“You get this transforma­tion and change which David is exploring.”

Orton added: “Romans came with grain, most likely linked to army provisions or trade. Rat skeletons have been found by Roman villas and settlement­s suggesting they lived in close proximity.

“The rats disappeare­d not long after the Romans left and the trade necessary for military provisions died down.

“They then reappear with the arrival of the Vikings and trading ships. We look at rats in the context where they are found and use carbon dating to tell the age of the tiny skeletons.”

Both Roman and Viking armies invaded Scotland, the Romans going as far as Perthshire and further north, while the Vikings settled on Orkney and Shetland, the Western Isles and parts of the mainland.

The name of Scalpay in the Western Isles comes from the Norse for “boat-shaped island” while Ulva, by Mull, is Norse for “wolf”, or “Ulfr’s island”.

The teams of researcher­s working across 20 countries believe that by tracing common ancestors through the DNA in skeletons, they can also tell how black rats spread to Northern Europe. This informatio­n has enabled them to say with great certainty that the black rat colonized Europe in two distinct waves.

DNA analysis of rat bones allows scientists to chart the spread of the rodents and, from around 1,000 years ago, researcher­s can see how the black Roman rat, Rattus rattus, spread throughout Europe, along with humans.

The black rats are all believed to have come directly from common ancestors with bones from the British Isles in the north-west to Serbia in the south-east of Europe revealing similar genes.

Black rats brought by the Vikings were in turn overcome by larger brown rats called Rattus norvegicus. They are said to have originated in Norway, after travelling north from China.

The black rat’s last stand was on the Shiant Isles in 2018 because they preyed on native birds’ eggs. They are believed to have arrived in the Outer Hebrides following a shipwreck.

 ?? ?? An engraving shows the prow of a Roman warship, the kind used to invade Britain
An engraving shows the prow of a Roman warship, the kind used to invade Britain
 ?? ?? Rats came on Viking longships
Rats came on Viking longships

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