
Prehistoric and Medieval Activity at Grantown Road, Forres, Morayshire
Authors: Lindsay Dunbar
Contributors: Julie Dunne, Richard Evershed, Rob Engl, Toby Gillard, George Haggarty, Simon Howard, Dawn McLaren, Ann MacSween, Andrew Morrison, Jackaline Robertson and Mike Roy
Summary: Archaeological excavations conducted in 2017 at Grantown Road, Forres form the final phase of works on a residential development that began in 2002. The earlier works examined an area of more than 70ha and confirmed the presence of an extensive Iron Age settlement represented by ring-ditch, ring-groove, and post-ring structures, in association with four-post structures, a souterrain, and metalworking furnaces. The 2017 works (Canmore ID 320363), reported here, have expanded the record of prehistoric and medieval settlement in the area and revealed that a previously recorded cropmark site represented an Iron Age enclosure with a single post-ring roundhouse. Also identified in the present works were an Early Neolithic post-ring structure and a series of pits dating from the Neolithic to the medieval periods with artefact assemblages of pottery, lithics, and stone tools, including a rare fragment of a locally made mortar dated to the 13th century ad.
Keywords: Neolithic, Iron Age, medieval, enclosure, post-ring, roundhouses, mortar
Location: Grantown Road, Forres, Morayshire, (NJ 03255730), Scotland, UK
Periods: Mesolithic, Neolithic, Chalcolithic/Bronze Age, Iron Age, Medieval
Canmore ID: 320363
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Licence.