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5,000-year-old home of capital's first farmers discovered

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Published Date: 23 March 2009
THE remains of a hilltop home believed to be about 5,000 years old have been discovered on the outskirts of Edinburgh, The Scotsman can reveal.
The Neolithic roundhouse, found on a site where a quarry is due to be expanded, is one of the oldest prehistoric buildings to be discovered in the capital.

Archaeologists have hailed it as one of the most important finds ever made in Edinburgh bec
ause of its age – about the same as Skara Brae in Orkney – and unique location.

It is also expected to help fill in a largely unknown chapter in Scottish history, when farming had only recently spread to Britain from Europe.

The site, at Ravelrig Hill, near Dalmahoy, enjoys spectacular views across the Lothians and Fife, including landmarks such as Arthur's Seat.

Experts believe the roundhouse was probably built by one of the first families of farmers to start producing their own food in the area.

Experts from Glasgow University's Archaeological Research Division (Guard) have spent several months working in the area, which is already home to the remains of two prehistoric hill forts. The house, remains of which were found in a huge circular ditch, was surrounded by a larger egg-shaped enclosure.

Although no materials such as pottery have been discovered, archaeologists have been able to date flint recovered from the site, and the remains of an internal fireplace were found.

The site is thought to be roughly the same age as the cairn at Cairnpapple Hill, which is widely regarded as Scotland's most prehistoric burial site and can be seen from Ravelrig Hill.

Donna Maguire, project director for Guard, said there may once have been a number of settlements on the hill, lost when quarrying began in the area more than 150 years ago.

The discovery was only made because Edinburgh City Council insisted that an archaeological dig was carried out before construction giant Tarmac was allowed to expand its quarrying operation in the area.

Ms Maguire told The Scotsman: "We had no idea we would find anything like this, so it was hugely exciting. There's been very little like this discovered anywhere in the Central Belt. It dates from around the time of early farming but very little is known of that era in Scotland and that's why it's so significant.

"It was clearly built at the top of the hill because of its location overlooking the landscape. In a way, it was intended to make people see it and regard it as an important landmark."

John Lawson, the city council's archaeologist, said: "Although remains of buildings discovered at Cramond within the last ten years have been dated to 8,500 years ago, this is one of the most significant prehistoric sites to have been found in the wider Edinburgh area for many years."

All materials recovered are being taken away for analysis. The discovery is not expected to delay work to expand the quarry. Tarmac has been quarrying there since 1987.





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  • Last Updated: 22 March 2009 9:33 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

It's me!,

23/03/2009 08:11:43
It's the same age as Scara Brae but it's not going to stop Tarmac from quarrying? Mmmmm. Let me think about this one.
2

Major General Puffin-Stuff,

23/03/2009 08:23:29
#3

If it were only so simple to interpret Neolithic history in terms of unionist politics! LOL!
3

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 23/03/2009 09:37:12
Never knew Barrats were as old as that.
4

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 23/03/2009 09:50:46
"Ms Maguire told The Scotsman: "We had no idea we would find anything like this, so it was hugely exciting. There's been very little like this discovered anywhere in the Central Belt. It dates from around the time of early farming but very little is known of that era in Scotland and that's why it's so significant."

Ms McGuire must be very poor at her homework then because Dalmahoy Hill has been known as a Neolithic site for at least a century. Pathetic that the entire drift of this story is that Tarmac have unfettered right to destroy this site. What about "GUARD's" responsibilities> What happened to the Royal Commission on Ancient and Historic Monuments? What ahppened to the idea that ancient sites are part of the nation's history and worthy of preservation. oh I forgot, Edinburgh needs lots of roadstone for its new trams project. Pathetic journalism.
5

left4dead,

Earth 23/03/2009 10:22:24
Evidence of golden thread connecting neolithic farmers with the present...http://thejaggythistle.blogspot.com/2009/03/5000-year-old-site-provides-evidence-of.html
6

Yok Finney,

Ross-shire 23/03/2009 10:56:35
The Pictish Confederate Republic was our best attempt at an integral Nation and we were well advanced in agriculture, technology, medicine and learning. We were fast and ferocious fechters though war can't have been endemic as folk had to stay of a piece to till the ground and build things. Romans had their colonial outpost for a while as they could put plenty grunts on the ground to defend it.

The original substrate was augmented from both the East and West which pretty much corresponds to the dialects and character of present day Scots. Basically there were picts wi ships and picts wi horses as you'd still observe i the North East.

It'd be an improvement from being run by the thinktanks, policy wonks, and oligarchs of the UK regime. Onwart us Pritish!

Historically Welsh should be the language of diplomacy, law and science and why not?
7

Mcsnagpile,

23/03/2009 12:05:05
Abandoned due to being one of the RBS first negative mortgage holders.
8

Dr. James Wilkie,

Vienna 23/03/2009 13:54:08
#3: On the basis of DNA the entire modern human race can probably be traced back to one female who lived in Africa I think a couple of million years ago, writing from memory. So in principle all six or seven milliard of us on the planet ought to be one happy family living under one government.

However, that is still a bit off. Meantime, the various elements that became fused together to make the Scottish Nation over the past couple of thousand years have formed it into a unique whole unlike any other in the world. One of the major reasons for this is the country's geographical isolation, which makes it a natural unit of political organisation - and would do so even if the human race were ethnically homogenous over the entire planet.

The Celts brought the first high culture to Western Europe during the first millennium BC, but they were a cultural nation, not an ethnic one. The same applies to the Scots as an integral part of that culture.

Prehistoric tectonic plate movements pushed what is now Scotland onto the end of a protruding part of the Eurasian land mass, which at that time was joined to the continent by a land bridge. The Scottish topography is essentially Scandinavian, a fact that must be reflected in government policies over most of their range. This geographical and hence geoeconomic situation has formed the Scots into a social and cultural entity that is quite distinct in the world and requires its own administration sensitive to its unique local needs.

I suggest that those interested should take a look at the article Scotland's Status as a Nation at: http://www.realmofscotland.com/independence
9

Mikko,

Drumnadrochit 23/03/2009 16:00:13
If they look more closely they'll find the iron trackways of Edinburgh's first unfinished tram system.

 

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