2,500-year-old seal tooth necklace found at site of vanishing Orkney village
The coastal site at Swandro on Rousay is on the verge of disappearing altogether as changing tides eat away at the remains of the settlement which is believed to have been inhabited for more than 1,000 years.
From early Iron Age through to the Pictish era and the Viking age, work by archaeologists at Swandro is illuminating a powerful timeline of Scottish history.
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Hide AdAs well as the pendant, a weaving comb made from bone, several pieces of pottery and several shards of Roman glass are the latest finds helping to piece together life at the Swandro settlement. Earlier, a Pictish-era anvil was discovered.
“What is also interesting is the material it was found with, such as pottery that is very different to the type of pottery we have found at Swandro before.
“These items came from deposits right at the bottom of an Iron Age sequence, a series of layers of archaeology underneath a building which we think dates from the 1st Century BC to the 1st Century AD.
“They really tell a lot about how people were living here in the past and this rich supply of items help us see how things have changed over time.”
This is the second year of a three-year project to excavate Swandro before the sea claims it once and for all.
Dr Dockrill said Swandro was essentially an Iron Age village, which dates to around 500BC which may once have been surrounded by a ditch and centred around a huge roundhouse, the remains of which are also being excavated
While Swandro would have always have overlooked out to sea, the land on which it stood would once have stretched out much further into the water than it does now.
The team is due to return to the site in 2020 but Dr Dockrill said it was unlikely that all of the settlement remains will have survived.
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Hide AdHe added: “The part of the site closest to the sea, well I don’t think that will have survived by next year.
“This is why we put a lot of effort into excavating as much as we can of the oldest part of the site when we are there. We have our fingers crossed that there will not be a major storm over the year.
“The archaeology is extremely vulnerable to the changes in sea level due to climate change and what we are also seeing is the effect of the tide. Every tide is acting like a vacuum and, as it goes out, it takes material away. It is weakening the site.
"It is not just the storms we have to worry about, every tide is having an impact. We can see a marked different in the survival of the archaeology. It is quite important as we see the impact of climate change today to have evidence of these really long time spells to help us understand how people have adapted in the past.”