Bostadh (Iron Age settlement)

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Coordinates58°15′26″N 6°52′53″W / 58.2572°N 6.8814°W / 58.2572; -6.8814
Architectural stylesRoundhouse, Norse structure
Bostadh Iron Age settlement
A reconstruction of an Iron Age roundhouse based on the houses excavated on Bosta Beach
LocationGreat Bernera, Outer Hebrides, Scotland
Coordinates58°15′26″N 6°52′53″W / 58.2572°N 6.8814°W / 58.2572; -6.8814
Architectural stylesRoundhouse, Norse structure
Governing bodyHistoric Environment Scotland
OwnerComunn Eachdraidh sgire Bhearbaraidh (Bernera Historical Society)
Bostadh (Iron Age settlement) is located in Outer Hebrides
Bostadh (Iron Age settlement)
Shown within the Outer Hebrides

The Bostadh settlement (also known as Traigh Bosta; Traigh Bostadh; Bosta) is a settlement of houses located on Bosta Beach. The Bostadh Iron Age settlement is located on the island of Great Bernera in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland.[1] The settlement originally dates to the Late Iron Age, about 400-800 CE.[2] A later Norse structure was built on top of the Iron Age settlement.[1] The settlement was located in an advantageous area; it had easy access to a freshwater stream to the south, and its proximity to the ocean provided easy access to fishing waters.[2]

The Bostadh Iron Age settlement is a scheduled monument. It is monitored by Historic Environment Scotland and is managed by the Comunn Eachdraidh sgire Bhearbaraidh (Bernera Historical Society).[3]

Prior to excavation there was a variety of evidence indicating the presence of a settlement on Bosta Beach, including artefacts and signs of the presence of structures.

As early as 1966 the presence of midden deposits and stone structures have been recorded. Records state that the middens and the structures were being eroded at the base of the dunes.

In 1968, the settlement was further exposed by erosion. The artefacts found include what is likely Iron Age pottery sherds, stone implements and pieces of corroded iron. At least two similar floors were found nearby, and they appreared to be more or less undisturbed. Inside of a structure demarcated by large stones, a flint flake, a small, thick pottery sherd, an antler tine of a red dear with evidence of use as tool, and a fragment of whale bone tool were found. These objects are currently held in Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum.

In 1969 an arc of set stones and a series of shorter sections of walls was found. These walls were likely the remains of houses. The midden material was also exposed a few yards to the west of the structures. The midden was found to contained shells, bones, fragments of broch-type pottery, and a piece of decorated bone that was perforated for use as a comb.

In 1983 a rusty metal object of twisted metal that was bent into ring of 114 millimetres was found in an eroding sand dune.

In January 1993 storm force winds and high tides caused significant erosion. The storm resulted in the erosion of at least one metre of dune face and lowered the level of the beach approximately one metre. A series of stone buildings were revealed underneath an eroding sand dune over a stretch of 30 metres. The total height of eroding dune ranged from 2 to 5 metres.The buildings had been buried beneath a sand dune. The buildings are bordered by exposed rock to the north, a stream estuary to the south, and Bosta Cemetery in the east. Most of the walls were over a metre thick. The walls consist of drystone facings on both the inner and outer surfaces and are filled with a sand core. The walls were constructed on dark brown sand deposits.

Finds include a significant number of pottery sherds including 160 rims and 50 bases, Beaker pottery, fish and animal bones (some of which displaying signs of butchering), antler, shells, worked bone tools, fragments of up to three combs, and a lead weight.

In 1994 more artefacts were revealed as a result of further erosion. These artefacts included a broken red hammerstone, a broken quartz hammerstone, a pot boiler, two quartz cores, and a pottery rim decorated with a stab pattern.

In 1996 a rescue excavation was carried out on the settlement. The excavation revealed five structures from 1st millennium as well as the associated middens. Another later Norse building was also revealed.[1] Excavations were carried out by CFA Archaeology with the University of Edinburgh with the assistance of students and local community volunteers. The excavation revealed the layout of the village, which was recorded in detail.[4]

Houses 1-3 date from 1st millennium CE and share a number of architectural features. They are all stone roundhouses with south-facing entrances and at least one annex. The walls have drystone inner and outer faces and are filled with cores of sand and midden. The central hearths in Houses 1-3 are constructed using stones and take the form of a three-sided, open ended rectangle. Evidence of inhabitation after the buildings had been abandoned was found. There is a consistent stratigraphic sequence that is observed between the Houses 1–3, showing that at least these three of the five structures were in use in the same period. House 3 was constructed in a substantial midden spread. This layer was not excavated due to time constraints. A protection strategy was developed over the course of the excavation in order to preserve the site.

Artefacts uncovered during the excavation include pieces of pottery and animal bone, carved bone implements, the remains of composite bone combs, hammerstones, querns, and some metalwork. An example of decorated pottery that has been tentatively dated to some time from the third to fifth centuries CE was found in House 5. The preservation of palaeoenvironmental evidence in the settlement is excellent.

Three sides of a later, likely Norse building was found overlaying the sand infill within House 1. This building survived to a maximum height of two courses high. The midden spread associated with this building spread downhill from the structure and overlays the sand infill of House 3. The presence of a steatite bowl fragment with rivet holes in the midden suggests that the rectangular structure dates to the Norse period.[1]

Preservation

Reconstruction

References

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