Inchmarnock, Southpark
Rock Shelter (Iron Age)
Site Name Inchmarnock, Southpark
Classification Rock Shelter (Iron Age)
Canmore ID 300171
Site Number NS05NW 35
NGR NS 02023 58333
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/300171
- Council Argyll And Bute
- Parish North Bute
- Former Region Strathclyde
- Former District Argyll And Bute
- Former County Buteshire
NS05NW 35 02023 58333.
Site 9. Rock shelter, roughly 7.5m across and 5.5m wide, located in old cliff face above raised beach near SW corner of island. Trial trench evaluation across mouth of cave revealed a series of occupation deposits; environmental remains yielded a large quantities of marine shell, bone, charcoal and small quantity of charred hazel nutshells. Basal deposit in cave radiocarbon-dated to the period cal 346-4 BC.
Lowe 2008
This rock-shelter is as previously described; another shelter (NS05NW 42) is situated some 180m to the E.
Visited by RCAHMS (GFG, MM, GB) 3 June 2009.
Project (1999 - 2004)
NS 020 600 (island centre) The Archaeology of Inchmarnock Research Project, initated by the island's new owner, Lord Smith, was undertaken over the period 1999 to 2004 with the aim of providing as complete a record as possible of the island's archaeology; of identifying and understanding better what was there, precisely where it was, and how it might be preserved for future generations.
The overarching objectives of the project were to consider how Inchmarnock's inhabitants made use of their island landscape in the medieval and later period and how the island itself related to the wider world.
The preliminary results of each season's fieldwork, together with assessments of the artefacts and environmental remains recovered, were reported on an annual basis. In tandem with this was an extensive radiocarbon-dating programme, providing the chronological framework for the investigation.
Sponsor: Sir Robert Smith
Headland Archaeology, C Lowe 2008
Archaeological Evaluation (May 2000 - September 2000)
NS 020 600 (island centre) An archaeological survey and evaluation was carried out on the island of Inchmarnock. Both prehistoric and medieval aspects of the island's past were explored. Building surveys were completed for the three farm steadings of Northpark, Midpark and Southpark.
Full reports have been lodged with the NMRS.
Sponsor: Sir Robert Smith
Headland Archaeology, S Halliday, 2000
Archaeological Evaluation (May 2000)
NS 020 600 (island centre) Evaluation of the large cairn (Site 1) at the north end of the island revealed a stone kerb, reinforcing its interpretation as a funerary monument. It may, however, have been augmented with field clearance stones at a later date. The cup-and-ring marked stone (Site 3), near Northpark, was found to be a discrete slab, rather than part of a rock outcrop. Meanwhile, a series of upright stones (Site 7), in the woodland south of Southpark, may represent the lines of old field dykes, long since robbed of their stone.
A detailed survey of St Marnock’s chapel and its immediate environs was undertaken. Excavations in the field to the west of the chapel failed to find any evidence of the cemetery mentioned in the documentary records. A ditch, however, was located. It may represent the line of an old enclosure around the site.
Medieval corn-drying may be indicated by the robbed structures at Site 8. These, together with the two clearance cairns and old dyke at Site 11, may represent outlying elements of the small medieval or later settlement at Site 5, surveyed here for the first time. Meanwhile, evidence from the caves at the south end of the island (Sites 16A & 16B) suggests they were resorted to on a temporary basis in the medieval period.
Finally, one site (Site 9), previously identified as a possible structure, was found to be a natural feature.
Sponsor: Sir Robert Smith
Headland Archaeology, Stuart Halliday and Christopher Lowe, 2000
Archaeological Evaluation (May 2000)
Site 9. Rock shelter, roughly 7.5m across and 5.5m wide, located in old cliff face above raised beach near SW corner of island. Trial trench evaluation across mouth of cave revealed a series of occupation deposits; environmental remains yielded a large quantities of marine shell, bone, charcoal and small quantity of charred hazel nutshells. Basal deposit in cave radiocarbon-dated to the period cal 346-4 BC.
Lowe 2008
Field Visit (3 June 2009)
This rock-shelter is as previously described; another shelter (NS05NW 42) is situated some 180m to the E.
Visited by RCAHMS (GFG, MM, GB) 3 June 2009.
