This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peninsula,Isle of Lewis, as part of the Uig Landscape Project. We present the archaeological evidence from An Dunan, a causewayed tidal islet in the salt marsh of Uig sands, a liminal and potentially ritual site dating to the Iron Age and Medieval period. The first main Mid Iron phase was characterised by activities centred on an ash mound, demarcated by four large orthostats, within an essentially rectilinear structure containing internal cellular divisions. The activities within the structure have been interpreted as non-domestic in nature. The second main phase involved the medieval re-use of aspects of the Iron Age building to create a small ...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
This volume presents the results of archaeological investigations between 1996 and 2005, carried out...
Reproduced with the permission of the publisher and JSTOR. Journal home page http://www.romansociety...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
The area of Mealasta is known to be the location of medieval settlement, with a possible nunnery on ...
This paper presents the results of the excavation of two dry-stone structures in the abandoned black...
AOC Archaeology Group would like to thank Historic Environment Scotland for funding the work.Human r...
A rare, intact Viking boat burial in western Scotland contained a rich assemblage of grave goods, pr...
Dùn Èistean stands at the end of a long tradition of clan strongholds seen in the MacLeod lordship o...
This paper presents the results of a palaeoenvironmental investigation of riverine deposits containi...
The small Channel Island of Herm combines several distinct habitats ranging from steep rocky coasts ...
Beside the Ocean: Coastal Landscapes at the Bay of Skaill, Marwick and Birsay Bay, Orkney: Archaeol...
This paper is an updated version of that given at the Maritime Communities conference in 2013, which...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
This volume presents the results of archaeological investigations between 1996 and 2005, carried out...
Reproduced with the permission of the publisher and JSTOR. Journal home page http://www.romansociety...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
This is the third of a series of four papers that present the excavations undertaken on the Uig Peni...
The area of Mealasta is known to be the location of medieval settlement, with a possible nunnery on ...
This paper presents the results of the excavation of two dry-stone structures in the abandoned black...
AOC Archaeology Group would like to thank Historic Environment Scotland for funding the work.Human r...
A rare, intact Viking boat burial in western Scotland contained a rich assemblage of grave goods, pr...
Dùn Èistean stands at the end of a long tradition of clan strongholds seen in the MacLeod lordship o...
This paper presents the results of a palaeoenvironmental investigation of riverine deposits containi...
The small Channel Island of Herm combines several distinct habitats ranging from steep rocky coasts ...
Beside the Ocean: Coastal Landscapes at the Bay of Skaill, Marwick and Birsay Bay, Orkney: Archaeol...
This paper is an updated version of that given at the Maritime Communities conference in 2013, which...
A Mesolithic human presence in the Outer Hebrides has long been postulated by palynologists but arch...
This volume presents the results of archaeological investigations between 1996 and 2005, carried out...
Reproduced with the permission of the publisher and JSTOR. Journal home page http://www.romansociety...