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Allt Dubh

Distilling Site (Period Unassigned), Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Farmstead (Period Unassigned), Lade (Period Unassigned)

Site Name Allt Dubh

Classification Distilling Site (Period Unassigned), Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Farmstead (Period Unassigned), Lade (Period Unassigned)

Alternative Name(s) Allt A' Mhuilinn

Canmore ID 103097

Site Number NH35NE 14

NGR NH 3979 5503

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/103097

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Digital Images

Administrative Areas

  • Council Highland
  • Parish Contin
  • Former Region Highland
  • Former District Ross And Cromarty
  • Former County Ross And Cromarty

Archaeology Notes

NH35NE 14 3979 5503

A farmstead comprising one unroofed building and one enclosure is depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Ross-shire 1881, sheet lxxxvii). One unroofed building is shown on the current edition of the OS 1:10000 map (1971).

Information from RCAHMS (AKK) 7 March 1996.

Activities

Field Visit (10 February 2007 - 15 March 2007)

Srp Note (10 January 2011)

The Allt Dubh is a small tributary of the River Conon, 1 kilometre to the SE of Scatwell House. The area is on a N facing slope and part of the Little Scatwell Estate. At the foot of the burn, where it merges with the river, there is a collection of houses, formerly known as Blackburn, which include an old Schoolhouse. The burn of Allt Dubh runs through a small wooded valley, descending from SW to NE, it is c.2 kilometres in length. Its upper reaches are quite complex with many small burns merging from the surrounding hills. To the south the moorland rises to a height of 400m and to the N the area is bounded by Cnoc Dubh and the former lands of the Scatwell Estate. The majority of the area is wooded with open birch in the lower part to the south of the burn, and planted conifers in the upper part to an altitude of 150m. Thereafter there is open heathery moorland with birch and Scots Pine following the burns.

Ariel photographs from 1950 indicate that the upper part of the Allt Dubh had been recently felled. There are many tracks, probably used for extracting timber, the remains of which still exist today.

This summary record incorporates NOSAS site survey numbers 147A-D & 148A&B the remains of a small farmstead and associated structures in the upper reaches of the Allt Dubh. It is one of ten small farmsteads which are located in a confined area of the valley.

The site comprises two substantial rectangular buildings (147D & 148A) relating to the farmstead, a further building with an outshot (147A&B), thought to be a still bothy or possibly the site of a horizontal mill, fed by a stone lined lade (147C) and an enclosure (148B).

Further details of these and other associated sites can be found in the Strathconon Phase 1 Report (pages 42, 49) produced by the North of Scotland Archaeology Society and appended to this record.

Information from North of Scotland Archaeology Society

References

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