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Archaeology Notes

Event ID 655159

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Archaeology Notes

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/655159

ND35NW 3 3234 5655.

(ND 3234 5655) Brough (NR)

OS 6" map, Caithness, 2nd ed., (1907)

Broch (NR) (site of)

OS 1:10,000 map, (1974)

In 1940 this broch was destroyed to allow the construction of an aerodrome. Prior to this it had appeared as a grass- covered knoll about 150ft in diameter and 9ft high. It had been partially excavated in 1904 by Sir Francis Tress Barry, when only the W half of the tower was exposed. A second excavation was carried out by Calder in 1940, immediately preceding destruction.

The broch had consisted of a round tower, encirled by a strong defensive rampart, with a wide, shallow ditch outside. Originally circular in shape, the tower had been built with walls some 15ft thick and an average external diameter of 62ft 6ins. The entrance had been on the W with a guard chamber built into the thickness of the wall off the S side of the passage. From the inner wall face thirteen compartments were arranged radially around the inside of the tower, the divisions consisting of thin stone slabs set on edge. Structurally it would appear that these compartments were later than the broch and possibly early improvements.

Sherds of some twenty vessels were discovered, some of them resembling pottery from the lower levels at Traprain Law. In 1904 a bone needle was also found on this site. Other relics found during the 1940 excavation include a saddle quern, several grain rubbers, dishes, knocking stones, pivot stones, anvils, tether stones, pot lids, pounders and smoothing stones, a pestle and a whorl. Also parts of circular querns of post-Roman date. Fragments of human remains found indicated an individual of rather small stature.

Finds from the 1904 excavation in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland (NMAS) include a bone needle (HD 431), a bone borer (HD 432), a pot (GA 908) and possibly two whorls, one of sandstone and one of steatite, donated to the NMAS in 1908.

Proc Soc Antiq Scot 1909; RCAHMS 1911; C S T Calder 1950.

There are no remains of the broch to be seen.

Revised at 1:2500.

Visited by OS (R D L) 22 April 1963.

There is no trace of this broch.

Visited by OS (J M) 14 July 1982.

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