A Late Iron Age farmstead in the Outer Hebrides: Excavations at Mound 1, Bornais, South Uist

A Late Iron Age farmstead in the Outer Hebrides: Excavations at Mound 1, Bornais, South Uist book cover

A Late Iron Age farmstead in the Outer Hebrides: Excavations at Mound 1, Bornais, South Uist

Author(s): Niall Sharples

  • Publisher: Oxbow Books
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun. 2012
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 280 pages
  • ISBN-10: 184217469X
  • ISBN-13: 9781842174692

Book Description

The settlement at Bornais consists of a complex of mounds which protrude from the relatively flat machair plain in the township of Bornais on the island of South Uist. This sandy plain has proved an attractive settlement from the Beaker period onwards; it appears to have been intensively occupied from the Late Bronze Age to the end of the Norse period. Mound 1 was the original location for settlement in this part of the machair plain; pre-Viking activity of some complexity is present and it is likely that the settlement activity started in the Middle Iron Age, if not earlier. The examination of the mound 1 deposits provides an important contribution to our understanding of the Iron Age sequence in the Atlantic province. The principal contribution comprises the large quantities of mammal, fish and bird bones, carbonised plant remains and pottery, which can be accurately dated to a fairly precise and narrow period in the 1st millennium AD. These are augmented by a substantial collection of small finds which included distinctive bone artefacts. The contextual significance of the site is based on the survival of floor deposits and a burnt-down roof; the floor deposits can be compared with abandonment and adjacent midden deposits providing contrasting contextual environments that help to clarify depositional processes. The burning down of the house and the excellent preservation of the deposits within it provide an unparalleled opportunity to examine the timber superstructure of the building and the layout of the material used by the inhabitants.

Editorial Reviews

Review

This is a fine, well-crafted volume containing another rich vein of new data on the Hebridean settlement record…In drawing together this volume, Sharples has put the ball in the reader’s court. We know where he stands, and he has provided us with the wherewithal to reach our own conclusions. This is surely exactly as an excavation report should be…Floors of structures preserved in the calcareous sands of the Hebridean machair have much to tell scholars about life and living on this wider stage. This volume deserves that wider readership. — Stratford Halliday The Archaeological Journal

From the Publisher

Niall Sharples is a Professor at Cardiff University. He has excavated widely throughout the British Isles but most noticeably in the Western Isles of Scotland and the south west of England. His research interests are focussed on the later prehistory of Britain and the prehistoric and historic settlement of the Scottish Islands.

About the Author

Niall Sharples is Professor of Archaeology at Cardiff University and has a particular interest in the archaeology of the Atlantic Fringe of Scotland and the later prehistory of Britain. He has undertaken numerous excavations, ranging from hillforts in Dorset to brochs in Shetland and has published widely on topics including the Neolithic enclosures of Wales, Iron Age burial practices and the history of archaeological research in the Western Isles.

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