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Palaeoenvironments, the archaeological record and cereal pollen detection at Clickimin, Shetland, Scotland
Authors:Kevin J Edwards  Graeme Whittington  Marie Robinson  Daniela Richter
Institution:aDepartment of Geography & Environment and Northern Studies Centre, University of Aberdeen, Elphinstone Road, Aberdeen AB24 3UF, UK;bSchool of Geography and Geosciences, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9AL, UK;cApplied Aquatic Ecology, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology (EAWAG), Seestrasse 79, CH-6047 Kastanienbaum, Switzerland
Abstract:The Loch of Clickimin, Shetland, is well known for its broch and associated monuments supposedly of the Bronze and Iron Ages, although the former date is disputed. Pollen, diatom and sedimentological investigations permit fresh insights into the landscape and economic impacts of those who constructed the monuments, reveal that the environs of the site experienced environmental change from Neolithic times onward and provide the first Holocene radiocarbon dates from the immediate locality. The broch-building period witnessed a continuation of pre-existing pastoral husbandry for which heather burning may have exacerbated the natural spread of blanket peat. Initially, no evidence was adduced for local arable activity in the present investigation, and this was thought to be consistent possibly with the low numbers of excavated querns and the absence of cereal macrofossil finds when compared with other Shetland broch sites. The application of ‘rapid scanning’ techniques, however, led to the discovery of a consistent cereal-type pollen representation from Bronze Age times onwards. The discrepancies between the palaeoenvironmental evidence and the environmental and palaeoeconomic inferences made by the excavator of the site are explored. Evidence is presented that both supports and contradicts previous assumptions surrounding an important archaeological site.
Keywords:Prehistory  Broch  Pollen  Cereals  Diatoms  Shetland  Scotland
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