SAIR 19:Excavation of a Bronze Age wicker container, Gearraidh na h'Aibhne, Isle of Lewis
by Paul R J Duffy
with contributions from Christopher Burgess and Mark Holmes,
Jennifer Miller and Susan Ramsay
illustrations by Gillian McSwan, John Arthur and Northamptonshire Archaeology
GUARD, Department of Archaeology, Gregory Building, Lilybank Gardens, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ
ISBN 0-903903-88-1
Published in April 2006 by The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, in association with The Council for British Archaeology and Historic Scotland, in Adobe Acrobat format. Available free of charge (see Terms & Conditions of Use).
Report Summary
An archaeological excavation was carried out at Gearraidh na h'Aibhne near Calanais on the Isle of Lewis by Northamptonshire Archaeology, working for Glasgow University Archaeological Research Division (GUARD) as part of the Historic Scotland Human Remains Call Off Contract. The site, initially interpreted as a cist potentially containing a bog body, was identified during annual peat cutting. Excavation demonstrated that the feature was in fact an oval pit containing a quantity of hazel branches, capped with a number of flat slabs of Lewisian Gneiss. Several similar stones had been placed in the base of the feature, overlying more hazel branches.
The observation of several branches placed vertically at the edges of the cut suggests that the wood remains may have originally constituted a wicker structure or basket. Further evidence of anthropogenic activity was identified in the form of bent and/or twisted hazel rods and cut marks on a larger piece of wood. Growth-ring analysis of the hazel pieces identified two distinct age clusters: a large group of pieces between five and seven years old and a smaller group between ten and 13 years old, indicating the hazel branches had been deliberately selected for size. Analysis of preserved botanical macrofossil remains indicated that heather type stems and Sphagnum moss might have been incorporated or deposited into the structure. Two radiocarbon dates of 1080-830 BC (SUERC-2086) and 1000-830 BC (SUERC-2087) at 2-sigma probability were obtained from two discrete samples of hazel, suggesting the structure was constructed and deposited during the Late Bronze Age.
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Report content
| Title Page | ||
| Table of Contents | ||
| List of Illustrations | ||
| List of Tables | ||
| 1 | Summary | |
| 2 | Introduction | |
| 3 | The Excavation by Christopher Burgess and Mark Holmes | |
| 3.1 Aims, objectives and methods | ||
| 3.2 Excavation results | ||
| 4 | Botanical Remains by Jennifer Miller and Susan Ramsay | |
| 4.1 Wood fragments | ||
| 4.2 Organic remains | ||
| 4.3 Results | ||
| 5 | Radiocarbon Dates from Gearraidh na h'Aibhne by Paul R J Duffy | |
| 6 | Discussion by Paul R J Duffy, with Jennifer Miller & Susan Ramsay | |
| 7 | Acknowledgements | |
| 8 | References | |
Published by The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, in association with The Council for British Archaeology and Historic Scotland, in Adobe Acrobat format. Available free of charge (see Terms & Conditions of Use).
Use http://www.sair.org.uk/ to cite this page.
Page last modified by Seren Langley (serenlangley@britarch.ac.uk) on Wednesday 19 April 2006.
