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Roman fort is revealed by work at water plant



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Published Date: 05 January 2008
A 2,000-YEAR-OLD Roman fort has been uncovered on the site of a new £60 million water treatment plant.
The remains of the camp were found during work on the Glencorse plant on the edge of the Pentland Hills Regional Park in Midlothian.

It is hoped the find will yield clues on how the Romans organised their occupation of the area in the first century AD.

The site is thought to be a Roman marching camp and is part of a network of bases, watchtowers and camps across lowland Scotland.

Historians had suspected there were Roman remains at Glencorse from studying aerial photographs, but this is the first evidence to be found.

No artefacts have been discovered but David Connolly, an archaeologist, described the find as an "important piece of the jigsaw".

He added: "Understanding the Romans in Scotland is a complex matter, as Scotland was not subjected to a single phase of occupation or conquest. Every new discovery leads to further understanding of Roman Scotland."

The Scottish Water project is to be completed by 2010.



The full article contains 187 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 January 2008 9:07 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The Romans
 
1

donald,

glasgow 05/01/2008 06:18:27
Picts ready to attack.
2

James, Edinburgh,

05/01/2008 09:56:50
Complete job by 2010? I very much doubt it now that these remains have been found. This is just the ammunition that the objectors to the scheme have been waiting for. I foresee a delay to this major project for at least two years
3

Caora Dubh,

O'n taigh 05/01/2008 18:35:04
#2 James: At most the project will be marginally delayed. Little is found in marching camps precisely because they were marching camps: the Roman soldiers just stayed there for a few nights and moved on, taking all their equipment with them. The locations of the camps are almost always much more important than any artifacts found there.
4

gaffer,

Kamloops 05/01/2008 20:59:20
scotland is very lucky that the italians dont lay claim to any areas that Roman camps are found the way the canadian indians lay claim to lands that they believe their ancestors were on or passing thru ,
5

Ard Righ,

The Rock Of Edinburgh 06/01/2008 20:58:46
understand it, rip it up, and then dance on it.
6

Robbierunciman,

Romney Marsh 06/01/2008 23:42:47
I hope the italians don't hear about wee ecks position on the Lewis Chessmen in the British Museum. They would expect him to hand back any artefacts found to them, so that they can be displayed 'in context' next to a grubby little enterprise.
7

Flossie,

Moray 07/01/2008 20:21:37
#6 Robbierunciman:- Let's not forget the Elgin Marbles!!.

 

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