Shaking off the mud: Leaving Clarkly Hill

The Clarkly Hill dig is done. Like the skeins of geese who’ve been flying over us for the past week, the archaeologists have migrated south to winter quarters, shaking off the mud from our boots. We’ve left the field to the whaups who’ve been crying indignantly at us since we trespassed on their land.

There’s a flurry of work still to do – tools to clean and collect, trenches to backfill, portaloos to empty – the stuff you never see in Indiana Jones … But now we need to gather our thoughts, work out what it all means, and get the behind-the-scenes stuff started. Lists to type, numbers to correlate, samples to process, finds to wash. A lot of this will happen in Moray over the next few months – thanks to the funding we got from Moray LEADER and the Baxter Foundation, we can involve local enthusiasts in this, giving them a close-up look at how archaeological interpretation works.

Advanced rain protection techniques.
Advanced rain protection techniques.

So what have we found out? There are still loads of questions turning in my mind, and I need a few days in our library to chase up some ideas and knock the edges off some of my crazier interpretations. But it’s clear we’ve got a really long-lived site here – this was one of THE places to be in Moray. The oldest finds go right back to the Mesolithic, about 6,000-8,000 years ago, when a scatter of flints suggests that a band of hunter-gatherers visited here – perhaps just for a few days, perhaps regularly over several generations. I’m sure they were drawn here because it sat beside a loch which is now drained – in deep prehistory, this was a ready larder, with food there for the taking.

The most unexpected find was part of a circular enclosure with settings for stones, and a couple of massive plough-scarred boulders. I reckon this is the remains of a stone circle, dating back about 4,000-5,000 years – but I need to go and interrogate some of my prehistorian colleagues before sticking my neck out too far on this!

Could this be a stone circle? A curving dark enclosure surrounds some hefty stones, with stone-packed holes for others which are now lost.
Could this be a stone circle? A curving dark enclosure surrounds some hefty stones, with stone-packed holes for others which are now lost.

Stone circles (if that’s what this is) are very rare in Moray, so this would be a major addition to our knowledge. There’s certainly other stuff of this date – we also found a standing stone which had been deliberately taken down, and I wonder if these marks of an ancient past encouraged people to settle here in the Iron Age – there’s nothing like taking over an ancient site to show how important and well-connected you are.

A collapsed standing stone, and smaller stones which once formed a socket for it.
A collapsed standing stone, and smaller stones which once formed a socket for it.

Our massive roundhouse threw up some lovely surprises. The big black crescent which shows so clearly on the photos is a hollow where animals were kept, with traces of fences to guide cattle and sheep around the interior. A dark layer at the base is a gold mine for us – it’s sealed by later activity, and must be linked to the use of the house. There’s been a long debate over what these houses were used for – now the samples we’ve taken should help us answer this. We’re hoping for traces of prehistoric cow dung – again, not the sort of thing which Indiana Jones would get out of bed for. Our star find from here is also minor league by his standards, but we’re chuffed – it’s a lovely spiral bronze finger ring, confirming that our house was in use around 2000 years ago.

Our big roundhouse, with the natty orange buckets marking where posts once stood. You can see where we’ve dug through the hollow where the cattle were once kept.
Our big roundhouse, with the natty orange buckets marking where posts once stood. You can see where we’ve dug through the hollow where the cattle were once kept.
Careful excavation of the bronze spiral ring.
Careful excavation of the bronze spiral ring.

Our other trenches will need radiocarbon dates before we can put them in their rightful place. One produced a metal-worker’s workshop, either Iron Age or Pictish in date. Finds included a clay doughnut which acted to shield the skin of the bellows from the heat of the fire – a vital tool but a rare find.

Digging up the workshop.
Digging up the workshop.
A clay doughnut? No, it’s a heat-shield for a metal-worker’s bellows.
A clay doughnut? No, it’s a heat-shield for a metal-worker’s bellows.

Another trench produced a very odd building – a squashed oval shape, its interior dominated by a massive sandstone slab over a metre across, which acted as a hearth. It’s much bigger than even the hungriest family would need – was this a special building for preparing feasts at ceremonies? And what date is it? I’ve been flicking through mental images, trying to find something similar, but it’s tricky – could be anything from Neolithic to Pictish, so we need to go and raise money for radiocarbon dates to find out.

A view over the enigmatic stone circle (?) to an equally enigmatic building!
A view over the enigmatic stone circle (?) to an equally enigmatic building!

That’s the great thing about archaeology – finding the unexpected. We got more of the story we were looking for, about the Iron Age and the Pictish period, but we got far more besides – a glimpse into lost worlds. Now for a winter of reading and head-scratching as I try to make sense of it all.

Kids from Lhanbryde Primary School helping us to sieve the spoilheaps.
Kids from Lhanbryde Primary School helping us to sieve the spoilheaps.
Optimistic future archaeologists showing off their finds.
Optimistic future archaeologists showing off their finds.
Lhanbryde kids learning how to build a roundhouse.
Lhanbryde kids learning how to build a roundhouse.
The dig team recreate a roundhouse
The dig team recreate a roundhouse – “posts” in a circle, “cows” round the edge, and a very creative “fire” in the middle.
An unusual find – a decorated shale bangle fragment. Shale isn’t local to the area – this must have been imported from the far side of the Moray Firth.
An unusual find – a decorated shale bangle fragment. Shale isn’t local to the area – this must have been imported from the far side of the Moray Firth.
Preparing to lift another unusual find – a largely-intact pot. A challenge for the conservators …
Preparing to lift another unusual find – a largely-intact pot. A challenge for the conservators …

You can read more about the dig in Fraser’s first and second blog posts about Clarkly Hill.

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