This second of two volumes presents archaeological and scientific studies of a wide range of materials from the unusually long-occupied Bronze Age and Iron Age site of Cladh Hallan on South Uist in the Western Isles of Scotland. These include metalworking debris, copper-alloy, gold and iron artefacts, bone and antler tools and ornaments, flint and quartz tools, coarse stone tools, pumice, shale ornaments and fuel ash slag. The metalworking assemblage, from casting weapons, tools and ornaments, is exceptional in its size and in its being stratified within a domestic context of production. Metal tools and ornaments, some placed as special deposits on house floors, include a gold-plated penannular ring and an iron object stratified within an 11th-century BC house floor, among the earliest finds of iron artefacts in Britain.
The enormous and well-preserved environmental assemblage includes faunal remains of land mammals, whales, fish, birds and marine and terrestrial molluscs. Sheep were the most numerous domestic species within an assemblage of over 150,000 land mammalian remains, and Cladh Hallan has the largest collection of canine remains for any settlement in British later prehistory. Carbonized plant remains derive principally from cultivation of barley and associated weeds of cultivation.
The site’s assemblage provides extensive material for chemical analysis of food residues, isotopic analysis of animal and human remains, osteological analysis of human remains, histological analysis of their processes of diagenesis, and genetic analysis of ancient DNA from animal and human remains. These analyses include full investigation of the human remains from two composite inhumations that had formerly been mummified, the first discovery of this mortuary practice in prehistoric Britain.
The book concludes with a synthesis of results presented in the two volumes, presenting the rich insights provided by research on Cladh Hallan into life and death in the 2nd and early 1st millennia BC.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Preface
Mike Parker Pearson, Jacqui Mulville, Helen Smith and Peter Marshall
1 Metallurgy: ceramic material associated with metalworking
T. Cowie and M. Parker Pearson
2 The metalwork
D. Dungworth, M. Juddery, B. O’Connor, M. Parker Pearson, L. Troalen and T. Verolet
3 The bone and antler artefacts
Glyn Davies
4 Use-wear analysis of bone and antler points
Victoria Alexander
5 Worked flint, quartz and stone
J. Compton, L. Hurcombe, M. Edmonds and K. Martin
6 The coarse stone tools
H. Goddard and M. Parker Pearson
7 The pumice
M. Parker Pearson and H. Goddard
8 Bangles and beads
M. Charlton, F. Hunter and M. Parker Pearson
9 Fuel ash slag
M. Parker Pearson
10 Faunal remains of mammals (excluding cetaceans)
J. Mulville and A. Powell with J. Davies, A. Hale and R. Madgwick
11 Faunal remains of Cetacea
S. Evans and J. Mulville
12 The birds
J. Best and J. Cartledge†
13 The fish
C. Ingrem
14 Marine molluscs
H. Smith and M. Parker Pearson
15 Non-marine molluscs
M. Law and N. Thew
16 Carbonised plant remains
H. Smith and S. Colledge
17 Organic residue analysis of pottery residues
L. Cramp, R. Evershed, G. Taylor and O. Craig
18 Isotope analysis of animal and human bones
O. Craig, J.I. Griffith, J. Jones, C. Snoeck and G. Taylor
19 The human remains
C. Willis
20 Histological analysis of human and animal bone: exceptional taphonomies, exceptional histories?
T. Booth, R.Madgwick and J. Mulville
21 Ancient DNA survival analysis of faunal remains
V. Mullin
22 Coprolites
M. Parker Pearson
23 Cladh Hallan in its context
M. Parker Pearson
Mike Parker Pearson is Professor of British Later Prehistory at University College London. A distinguished prehistorian he has been involved with many major projects, including leading the recent Stonehenge Riverside Project. His many publications include Stonehenge: Exploring the Greatest Stone Age Mystery (2012) and From Machair to Mountains: archaeological survey and excavation in Uist (2012).
Jacqui Mulville is Reader in Bioarchaeology at Cardiff University and holds a PhD from the University of Sheffield. Her research focuses on the field of bioarchaeology with a particular interest in osteoarchaeology and the interpretative frameworks used in the construction of human and animal identities, and the archaeology of islands.
Helen Smith has been Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at Bournemouth University specialising in the analysis of archaeobotanical remains, having completed her PhD in Archaeology at the University of Sheffield on traditional farming practices of the Western Isles.