Re-evaluation of recorded sites and new field survey has identified 30 island dwellings in Shetland which are argued to be part of the wider Scottish Iron Age crannog building tradition. Four of the 30 sites identified were subject to field survey above and below water and found to be at least partially artificial. The morphology, distribution and chronology of Shetland’s artificial islands are discussed and compared to the rest of Scotland emphasising their parallels. The results support the recent move towards considering islet duns and brochs as crannogs. These newly identified sites in Shetland underline the ubiquity of the crannog building tradition in Scotland. Through discussion of the morphology, distribution and chronology of crann...
The Scalloway site is important for understanding the early historic settlement of the northen Isles...
An area of Shetland is examined in order to identify how Iron Age settlements might have related to ...
Crannogs are artificial islands found in Scottish and Irish lochs. They were built as early as the ...
Small island dwellings in Scotland and Ireland, typically (and often problematically) referred to as...
This article presents the results of a programme of investigation which aimed to construct a more de...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what we...
This paper outlines work on a group of newly-identified Neolithic crannogs in the Outer Hebrides. Me...
Crannogs are ancient artificial islands found in Scotland and Ireland, which typically had some sort...
In this paper we present a three-stranded investigation of all ‘archaeological islands’ (including c...
In this paper we present a three-stranded investigation of all ‘archaeological islands’ (including c...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what w...
An area of Shetland is examined in order to identify how Iron Age settlements might have related to ...
Understanding the chronology of Norse settlement is crucial for deciphering the archaeology of many ...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what we...
This article outlines new sear into the crannogs of north-east Scotland and dating of two crannogs i...
The Scalloway site is important for understanding the early historic settlement of the northen Isles...
An area of Shetland is examined in order to identify how Iron Age settlements might have related to ...
Crannogs are artificial islands found in Scottish and Irish lochs. They were built as early as the ...
Small island dwellings in Scotland and Ireland, typically (and often problematically) referred to as...
This article presents the results of a programme of investigation which aimed to construct a more de...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what we...
This paper outlines work on a group of newly-identified Neolithic crannogs in the Outer Hebrides. Me...
Crannogs are ancient artificial islands found in Scotland and Ireland, which typically had some sort...
In this paper we present a three-stranded investigation of all ‘archaeological islands’ (including c...
In this paper we present a three-stranded investigation of all ‘archaeological islands’ (including c...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what w...
An area of Shetland is examined in order to identify how Iron Age settlements might have related to ...
Understanding the chronology of Norse settlement is crucial for deciphering the archaeology of many ...
Freshwater loch settlements were a feature of society, indeed the societies, which inhabited what we...
This article outlines new sear into the crannogs of north-east Scotland and dating of two crannogs i...
The Scalloway site is important for understanding the early historic settlement of the northen Isles...
An area of Shetland is examined in order to identify how Iron Age settlements might have related to ...
Crannogs are artificial islands found in Scottish and Irish lochs. They were built as early as the ...