Beside the Ocean

Coastal Landscapes at the Bay of Skaill, Marwick, and Birsay Bay, Orkney: Archaeological Research 2003-18

David Griffiths author Jane Harrison author Michael Athanson author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxbow Books

Published:31st Mar '19

Should be back in stock very soon

Beside the Ocean cover

The Bay of Skaill, Marwick Bay, and Birsay Bay form openings in the high sandstone cliffs of Orkney’s Atlantic coast. These west-facing bays have long been favoured locations for settlement, with access to the ocean, to fresh water, to land and to resources for cultivation. The coastline of Orkney’s North-West Mainland is recognised worldwide as a location of exceptional archaeological importance, dominated by the Neolithic world heritage site of Skara Brae, and the Viking-Norse remains on the tidal Brough of Birsay. Many of its archaeological sites have been exposed by coastal erosion, a serious problem which continues its destructive progress with every oceanic storm.

Rescue excavation has contributed essential data, but its resources have concentrated on the zone of immediate threat, and until recently less has been understood about the archaeology of the landscape that lies behind the eroding shore. From 2003, a new archaeological research project began to investigate the hinterlands of the three bays. Using the rapidly-developing applications of archaeological geophysics, coupled with topographical survey, it has sought to create a broader and better-informed landscape context. Much of the land is dominated by windblown sand, at the Bay of Skaill and Birsay Bay in particular, reflecting centuries of environmental change, and requiring adaptive methodologies and approaches. Several new areas of archaeological interest have been identified, and many previously-known sites are now better-understood.

Excavation was used selectively to test the survey results. In one area in particular, a cluster of large settlement mounds on the northern side of the Bay of Skaill, two major Viking-Norse settlement clusters were identified and investigated. These held exceptionally well-preserved deposits, which have required detailed dating and analysis. The artefact assemblages include evidence for ferrous metalworking along with iron and copper alloy objects, combs, glass and amber beads, worked stone, ceramics and a range of archaeobotanical and archaeozoological remains. A Viking silver hoard discovered in 1858 and a Viking grave uncovered in 1888 are revisited. This monograph brings together the survey and excavation results, and tells a new story of an ancient landscape.

The production quality of the monograph is splendid, with lots of colour plans, and it is an altogether welcome addition to our understanding of the area. * Medieval Archaeology *
Beside the Ocean is replete with references to previous excavations and provides an extended context for these well-known individual sites, in an effort ‘to re-contextualise past discoveries’. Indeed ‘an extensive data capture is a more productive means of characterising archaeological potential in sand landscapes than an intensive one’.The director of research, David Griffiths, and all of the contributors to this impressive volume are to be congratulated on their capacity for carefully nuanced interpretations of minute details and on their meticulous presentation of the data. Exquisitely drawn site plans and profiles are colour-coded in a consistent schema (depicted in Fig. 4.43) and there is a helpful summary of the basic archaeological findings in the penultimate chapter. This book points as much towards the future of a multifaceted academic discipline as it does towards the past of the dramatic if somewhat forbidding Orcadian Mainland. * Early Medieval Europe *
The volume reflects the sustained effort of a 15-year campaign and the enthusiasm of the authors for this island landscape. As Andrew Greig states in the Foreword: “It pulls together many excavations, a multiplicity of sites, markers and human stories, landscape, deep time and folk history. It is the science of archaeology raised to a humanist level” (p. vii). * Antiquity *

ISBN: 9781789250961

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

376 pages