Burial in Scotland Dated to the Iron Age

News February 27, 2023

SHARE:

APPLECROSS, SCOTLAND—According to a BBC News report, skeletal remains from six people discovered under a kitchen floor in the Scottish Highlands in 2015 have been dated to 2,000 years ago. It was initially thought that they dated to the eighteenth century. Archaeologist Cathy Dagg said that these are the first remains dated to the Iron Age to be found in the acidic soils of the west Highland coast. These bones survived, she explained, because they were in an area with cobbled stones known as “storm beach” that helped keep them dry. The construction of a building on the site in the nineteenth century also helped to protect the site, Dagg concluded. For more on Scottish archaeology, go to "Letter from Scotland: Land of the Picts."

  • Features January/February 2023

    Jungle Realm of the Snake Queens

    How women ascended the ranks in the highstakes world of Maya politics

    Read Article
    (Adobe Stock)
  • Letter from Ethiopia January/February 2023

    Exploring a Forgotten Jewish Land

    Using oral history, texts, and survey, archaeologists search for traces of a once-vibrant religious community

    Read Article
    (Courtesy JewsEast Research Project)
  • Artifacts January/February 2023

    Byzantine Solidus Coins

    Read Article
    (Dafna Gazit/Courtesy Israel Antiquities Authority)
  • Digs & Discoveries January/February 2023

    An Undersea Battlefield

    Read Article