Fieldwork Results

Gavin MacGregor (Author)

Alistair Becket (Contributor)

David Sneddon (Contributor)


Abstract


At North Barr River, Morvern, inspection of forestry planting mounds on a raised beach terrace identified a chipped stone assemblage associated with upcast deposits containing charcoal. An archaeological evaluation of the site, funded by Forestry Commission Scotland, sought to better understand the extent and character of this Mesolithic and later prehistoric lithic scatter. The lithic assemblage is predominantly debitage with some microliths and scrapers. The range of raw materials including flint, Rùm bloodstone and baked mudstone highlights wider regional networks. Other elements, including a barbed and tanged arrowhead, belong to later depositional episodes. Two mid-second millennium bc radiocarbon dates were obtained from soil associated with some lithics recovered from a mixed soil beneath colluvial deposits. The chronology of a putative stone bank or revetment is uncertain but the arrangement of stone may also date to the second millennium bc.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Published
12-06-2019
How to Cite
MacGregor, Gavin, Alistair Becket, and David Sneddon. 2019. “Fieldwork Results”. Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 84 (June), 5-8. http://journals.socantscot.org/index.php/sair/article/view/10172.