Kilduff Mains
Rig And Furrow (Medieval), Settlement (Period Unassigned)
Site Name Kilduff Mains
Classification Rig And Furrow (Medieval), Settlement (Period Unassigned)
Alternative Name(s) Kilduff
Canmore ID 56308
Site Number NT57NW 35
NGR NT 52413 77614
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/56308
- Council East Lothian
- Parish Athelstaneford
- Former Region Lothian
- Former District East Lothian
- Former County East Lothian
NT57NW 35 52413 77614.
Air photographs show the cropmark of a circular enclosure 150m E of Kilduff farmsteading. It measures about 40m in diameter within a ditch, with an entrance on the SE.
Information from RCAHMS (KB) 12 March 1999
Scheduled as Kilduff, enclosure.
Information from Historic Scotland, scheduling document dated 16 December 1993.
Geophysical Survey (August 2000 - January 2002)
Geomagnetic surveys have been carried out over a sample of 30 cropmark sites in the vicinity of Traprain Law, comprising Phase 1 of the Traprain Law Environs Project.
In the majority of cases (23 out of 30), the surveys have confirmed the presence on the ground of the enclosures shown on aerial photographs, often with very clear results. In a number of cases, the surveys have produced evidence of probable internal and/or external features which were not immediately visible on air photographs, while in other cases, the presence of these additional features has been confirmed. Several of the sites investigated appear to represent more than one phase of archaeological activity.
In the 7 cases where cropmark sites have not been readily identified, this appears to be due to a number of factors. In only one instance does the underlying igneous geology appear to be the main factor; while in several cases, anomalies not immediately relatable to the previous cropmarks were detected and might well prove be of archaeological significance.
The work reported here brings to a conclusion Phase 1 of the Traprain Law Environs Project.
Archive to be deposited in the NMRS.
Sponsors: Historic Scotland, University of Durham, and Dickinson College, Pennsylvania.
Duncan Hale and Colin Haselgrove.
Project (2000 - 2004)
A project investigating the nature and development of later prehistoric and Roman Iron Age settlement in a 15 by 10 km block of landscape around the major fortified hilltop site at Traprain Law in East Lothian.