Archaeology Notes
Event ID 715447
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Archaeology Notes
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/715447
NT36NW 33 centred NT 34540 69160
See also NT36NW 54.
(Name: NT 3454 6916) ROMAN CAMP (R) (site of)
OS 6" map (1968)
A Roman temporary camp has been observed N of Dalkeith, represented by a length of some 950' of its N side, including a gate with tutulus.
J K St Joseph 1965
Further information has been gleaned about this camp, of which only part of the N side, including a gate, was known. The rounded NW angle and a length of some 600' of the W wide can not be added. More information can be expected under favourable crop conditions.
J K St Joseph 1973
There are no ground surface remains of this camp.
Visited by OS (SFS) 16 April 1975
Photographed by the RCAHMS in 1979.
Cropmarks on the S side of the district boundary, to the SE of Pickle Dirt steading, have revealed what may be lengths of the SE and SW side of this camp (see also NT36NW 54).
RCAHMS 1988
NT 345 692 area. An excavation was conducted between November 1994 and January 1995 across the Roman Temporary Camp (RTC) at Smeaton, within the proposed road corridor of the A68 Dalkeith Northern Bypass. Seven trenches totalling c7500 square metres in area were excavated within the c60m wide road corridor running for c400m between the River Esk and Salters Road. Archaeological features of Roman, prehistoric, post-medieval and modern origin were recorded. Those demonstrated to be of pre-medieval date were entirely restricted to the areas of gravel subsoil adjacent to the river. To the E of this, where a heavy clay subsoil was present, only a dense spread of cultivation furrows and land drains was identified.
Only the western alignment of the RTC perimeter ditch was located in Trench 1. A continuous length of 57.5m of this feature was exposed, through which 13 sections were excavated. The ditch was most substantial at the northern end of the trench, where it was 3.5m wide and 1.7m deep, with a V-shaped profile and indications of a squared channel at its base. No evidence was identified for any structural complexity within the ditch. It had not been deliberately backfilled. No trace of an adjacent rampart survived. Finds from the ditch include a carved sandstone block, a fragment of stone armlet and a chip of flint, all from the uppermost ploughsoil fill. The absence of the opposite, eastern, ditch alignment of the RTC accords with the cropmark evidence- either this feature was never dug or it has not survived later cultivation.
Three linear features and a series of pits were identified in the vicinity of the western RTC ditch. Artefact recovery and stratigraphic relationships indicate that at least some of these features are of pre-Roman origin. The linear features, c0.2m deep, were truncated by the RTC ditch: they may be some form of cultivation furrow (1018, 1113, 1125). Two large pits, 2.5m and 3.0m long and each c1.5m wide by 0.3-0.5m deep, containing primary deposits of burnt cereal grain and charcoal, are provisionally identified as cooking pits or ovens (1076, 2027). Pending further analysis, these features can be interpreted as being of either Roman or native in origin. The remaining pits were generally sub-circular, measuring between 0.5m and 1.5m across and less than 0.5m deep. Few showed evidence of multiple fills and none had been recut. Several sherds of coarse, native pottery were recovered from pits 2016 and 2017.
Sponsor: Roads Directorate of The Scottish Office Industry Department and managed on its behalf by Historic Scotland.
A J Dunwell 1995.
Site identified during an archaeological assessement carried out by CFA Archaeology Ltd.
Mhairi Hastie, 2006.