Note
Date 6 January 2016 - 21 October 2016
Event ID 1045298
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Note
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1045298
This fort occupies a low hillock on the NE side of the AI public road, backing onto a steep escarpment to the S of the mouth of the Thornton Burn. An irregular D-shape on plan, it measures a maximum of 125m from E to W along the sinuous lip of the escarpment by 45m transversely (0.42ha) within an asymmetric arc of two ditches up to 8m broad and 7m apart; a third ditch about 3m in breadth can be traced round the SE flank. James Hewat Craw, who first noted the cropmark from the train in 1919, recorded the inner and outer ditches at 3.6m and 2.7m in breadth respectively, but on the aerial photographs they not only appear much broader, but the mark of the inner displays several lines within its overall breadth, one along the inner lip being particularly prominent; without excavation it is unclear whether this feature simply reflects aspects of the underlying ditch fill, perhaps slumping along the inner lip, or whether the mark of the ditch has become conflated with that of another feature immediately up the slope. Nevertheless, allowing for the presence of an inner rampart commensurate with the ditches, the interior probably extended to about 0.33ha. Craw identified the marks of two hut-circles on the N side of the interior, and though these particular features have not been observed on more recent aerial photographs, there is at least one circular macula adjacent to the lip of the escarpment on the NW. The photographs also show a clearly-defined causeway across the inner ditch on the SW, but it is not clear whether there is a corresponding gap in the second ditch at this point. Conversely the second ditch, and possibly the third, terminate just short of the edge of the escarpment on the NE, implying an entrance-way approaching along its lip, but the inner ditch at this point appears to run straight out onto the slope. If these observations are correct, the defences represent several periods of construction.
Information from An Atlas of Hillforts of Great Britain and Ireland – 21 October 2016. Atlas of Hillforts SC3924