Introduction
Crannogs—artificial islands constructed in lakes and sea inlets—are a geographically widespread category of archaeological site in Scotland and Ireland. Over 570 island dwellings have been recorded in Scotland, including both ‘crannogs’ and ‘island duns’ (Figure 1; for a discussion of why these site types should be considered together, see Lenfert Reference Lenfert2013: 125–27). The Outer Hebrides represent a particular hotspot in their distribution with over 170 known sites (Lenfert Reference Lenfert2012). It is estimated that as many as 2000 crannogs were built across Ireland, and a single example is known also in Wales (Redknap & Lane Reference Redknap and Lane1994; Fredengren Reference Fredengren2002: 6). The general academic consensus is that Scottish crannogs were built, used and re-used over a period of 2500 years from the Iron Age to the post-medieval period, c. 800 BC to AD 1700 (Crone Reference Crone, Midgley and Sanders2012).
It was only due to extensive radiocarbon dating programmes during the 1970–1990s that the later prehistoric elements of many sites in Scotland were fully recognised (Crone Reference Crone1993; Henderson Reference Henderson1998). Excavation of Eilean Domhnuill, North Uist, in the 1980s revealed that this artificial islet site was built and used in the Neolithic period (Armit Reference Armit, Armit, Murphy, Nelis and Simpson2003). Consequently, many writers speculated that such islets may have been constructed more widely during the Neolithic, c. 4000–2400 BC (e.g. Crone Reference Crone1993: 248; Henderson Reference Henderson1998: 229; Cavers Reference Cavers2010: 42). Until the work outlined here, however, no further sites of this date had been found. This article presents the results of recent survey and excavation that demonstrate conclusively—and for the first time—the widespread presence of Neolithic crannogs in the Outer Hebrides.
Archaeologists have long debated exactly how a ‘crannog’ should be defined and it has proven difficult to reach a consensus (e.g. Morrison Reference Morrison1985; Henderson Reference Henderson1998; Dixon Reference Dixon2004; Cavers Reference Cavers, Midgley and Sanders2012). As Henderson and Sands (Reference Henderson, Sands, Menotti and O'Sullivan2012: 269) point out, ‘crannog’ is generally used as “a portmanteau term” to refer to all forms of artificial islets found in Scotland and Ireland. Although this wide applicability is convenient, it should be emphasised that the shared characteristics of these islets (at a very general level) do not necessarily mean that all crannogs were part of single tradition, or that we should seek the origins of later sites in the earliest examples in a given region (Henderson & Sands Reference Henderson, Sands, Menotti and O'Sullivan2012). This article focuses on a set of newly discovered Neolithic crannogs in the Outer Hebrides. These sites may have fulfilled a function quite different to those built in later periods; equally, on present evidence, there appears to have been a significant gap in artificial islet construction during the Late Neolithic/Bronze Age (c. 3000–800 BC). Any interpretive links between the sites described here and later crannogs should therefore be made with caution. Nevertheless, given the very high density of crannogs of all dates in the Outer Hebrides, it is important to establish a long-term narrative of islet construction there, in order to explore their earliest origins and investigate their functions and meanings.
As detailed below, these newly discovered sites are important for several reasons. The human activities in evidence at, and the physical character of, the islets also force us to reconsider the nature of Neolithic settlement and monumentality on a much broader scale. Further, the acts of watery deposition evidenced at these islets represent a previously unrecognised practice during this period. This article also considers the possibility that Neolithic crannogs may be found beyond the Outer Hebrides as well.
Neolithic crannogs
The notion that crannogs could date to as early as the Neolithic period first arose following Armit's 1980s excavations at Eilean Domhnuill (Armit Reference Armit, Armit, Murphy, Nelis and Simpson2003; Copper & Armit Reference Copper and Armit2018). Soon after commencing excavation, Armit and his team encountered substantial quantities of Neolithic pottery on what was expected to be an Iron Age islet. Several seasons of excavation revealed 11 phases of Neolithic archaeology, with the site's occupation dated from c. 3720–3510 to c. 2600 cal BC (at 95 per cent confidence) (the latter phases of the site are currently not well defined chronologically; Garrow et al. Reference Garrow, Griffiths, Anderson-Whymark and Sturt2017a: 115; see also Copper & Armit Reference Copper and Armit2018). The best-preserved layers contained stone walls, stone-built hearths, postholes and spreads of occupation debris including 22 000 sherds of pottery.
Following the recognition of Eilean Domhnuill's early origins, numerous writers suggested that further discoveries of Neolithic crannogs were likely. Nonetheless, despite sustained surveys (e.g. Dixon & Topping Reference Dixon and Topping1986; Henley Reference Henley and Pearson2012; Lenfert Reference Lenfert2012), no such sites were found. Two previously excavated sites that had yielded Neolithic material culture—Eilean an Tighe, North Uist, and Pygmie's Isle, Lewis—are questionable, as doubt remains as to whether or not they were islets during the Neolithic (Scott Reference Scott1951: 2; Lenfert Reference Lenfert2012: 219), and neither was artificially constructed.
The situation regarding recognition of Neolithic crannogs changed dramatically in 2012. Chris Murray, a resident of Lewis and former Royal Navy diver, was sufficiently intrigued by one islet that he decided to dive around it. His discovery of a series of remarkably well-preserved Early/Middle Neolithic ‘Hebridean Neolithic’ and ‘Unstan’ pots lying on the loch bed was completely unexpected. Following this discovery, Murray and the then conservation officer at Museum nan Eilean, Stornoway, Mark Elliott, embarked on a sustained search of other accessible islet sites—identified using Google Earth—across Lewis. In several cases, they found similarly impressive assemblages of Neolithic pottery (Figure 2 & Table 1). The presence of Neolithic crannogs beyond Eilean Domhnuill had, at last, apparently been confirmed (Figure 3; Sheridan et al. Reference Sheridan, Murray, Garrow and Anderson-Whymark2014). It is worth noting that two of the five Neolithic sites identified were not recorded within the National Record of the Historic Environment or Historic Environment Record; the other three were assumed to be later in origin, and none had been radiocarbon dated.
The Neolithic of the Outer Hebrides
The Early/Middle Neolithic of the Outer Hebrides is renowned both for its tombs and settlements (Figure 4; see Garrow & Sturt Reference Garrow and Sturt2017: 19–22). The tombs fall into two main groups: passage graves and Clyde cairns (Henshall Reference Henshall1972). The dearth of modern excavations of tombs and the consequent absence of radiocarbon dates means that the chronological relationship between these two different tomb types and their position within the span of the Neolithic remain unclear (Armit Reference Armit1996: 76; Henley Reference Henley2003: 168; Garrow et al. Reference Garrow, Griffiths, Anderson-Whymark and Sturt2017a). Notably, the distribution of tombs across the Outer Hebrides is irregular, with a higher density in North Uist (Figure 4). Consequently, some scholars have suggested that there may have been a surge in social competition due to pressure on land (Sharples Reference Sharples, Sharples and Sheridan1992: 327; Armit Reference Armit1996: 76).
In contrast to the investigation of tombs, almost all the settlement excavations are relatively recent. The impressive architecture and material culture assemblages at Eilean Domhnuill, described above, are echoed to a lesser extent at several other sites. Eilean an Tighe, The Udal, An Doirlinn and Allt Chrisal, for example, have all produced multiple phases of occupation, low stone walls, large hearths, postholes and spreads of occupation debris. Other Neolithic settlement sites are represented by more ephemeral archaeology, such as small-scale middens, pits and postholes (see Garrow & Sturt Reference Garrow and Sturt2017: 19–22). Several scholars have emphasised the differential distribution of Neolithic settlements when attempting to understand contemporaneous social dynamics. Armit (Reference Armit1996) has suggested that architectural differences between sites may have been related to settlement function, with some occupied all year round and others only seasonally. Similarly, Henley (Reference Henley2003: 133) and Copper and Armit (Reference Copper and Armit2018) have observed that apparently contemporaneous sites produce very different ceramic assemblages, and that differences in social status and identity may explain this divergence in material culture.
Due to their recent discovery, the unusual crannog sites considered here have not yet been incorporated into broader discussions of the region. As discussed later, these sites have the potential to transform existing narratives.
Exploring Neolithic crannogs on the Isle of Lewis
Following Murray's discoveries—and in collaboration with him from the outset—our investigations in 2016–2017 were designed to understand the characteristics of the islets, the context of the material found in the lochs around them, and the broader topographic and social landscape within which they were constructed. Given the limited time available, it was not possible to explore all five sites known to have produced Neolithic material (Table 1). Consequently, our preliminary survey focused on three sites: Loch Arnish, Loch Bhorgastail and Loch Langabhat. Our subsequent, more detailed survey focused on Bhorgastail and Langabhat (Figure 5), with only the latter subject to excavation. The techniques applied include side-scan sonar, dual-frequency single-beam echo-sounder, underwater diver surveys, underwater and aerial photogrammetry, real-time kinematic GPS survey, palaeoenvironmental coring and terrestrial excavation. The methods employed and full results are provided in interim reports published for each season's work (Garrow et al. Reference Garrow, Sturt and Copper2017b; Garrow & Sturt Reference Garrow and Sturt2019). The project's aims were:
• To determine the local topographic context of the islets.
• To establish whether the islets were artificially constructed and to record in detail their architectural form.
• To ascertain the presence of any features, or other archaeological evidence, atop or around the islets.
• To plot the distribution of, and recover further material from, the loch beds.
• To obtain samples suitable for radiocarbon dating.
At Bhorgastail, we removed surface vegetation across the full width (12m above the water) of the islet, in a 2m-wide strip. At Langabhat, we conducted more substantial excavations, digging an initial 2m-wide trench across the islet. This was subsequently extended in order to explore a small oval structure and other occupation deposits.
Architecture and local topographic context
Bathymetric survey indicates that both the Bhorgastail and Langabhat islets are located on local rises in the loch bed, adjacent to areas of deeper water (Figure 6). Both are clearly human-made, created through the piling up of boulders on the loch bed to form artificial islets (Figures 7–8). The evidence from these sites suggests that loch levels were probably similar at the time of construction in the Neolithic to those of today. The clastic sequences revealed in exposed sections and through coring indicate that these islets were probably surrounded by shallow water on three ‘sides’, with deeper water on the fourth.
At Langabhat, the islet builders made use of an existing natural crag that rises above the water's surface. Rocks were piled around this, creating a shallow, volcano-like form, the ‘crater’ of which was infilled with rocks to create a flattish surface (Figures 7–9). In the absence of a natural crag, the Bhorgastail islet was constructed entirely artificially. It nonetheless had a similar volcano-like form, infilled to create a flattish central space (Figures 7–8). Although Bhorgastail was not excavated, organic rich ‘peaty’ deposits were observed in its centre. This contrasts with Langabhat, which was stony throughout. Notably, at Bhorgastail, numerous worked timbers were observed underwater, towards the edges of the islet. Posts were sunk vertically through the silts and clays of the loch bed, with horizontal timbers fixed between them. These appear to be revetting constructed to stabilise the structure at the location where the islet's natural shelf gives way to deeper water.
The two islets represent very substantial constructions. The islet at Bhorgastail measures approximately 26 × 22m, and Langabhat 19 × 17m (representing the complete artificial structures, including those parts below the water surface) (Figure 7). The rocks that comprise both islets measure up to 0.7 × 0.4 × 0.3m in size, weighing up to 250kg each. At Bhorgastail, a stone causeway was built leading from the west of the islet towards the closest shoreline (Figure 5). No such causeway has yet been detected at Langabhat; it is possible that the islet was accessed by boat or a wooden causeway, although no evidence for either has so far been discovered.
On the islets themselves, no clear evidence of any Neolithic structures has yet been identified. On both sites, the presence of apparently modern, small cairns suggests that later activity may have disturbed original features. At Langabhat, a small, oval stone structure (3 × 1.5m) was identified just west of the islet's central point (Figure 9). In places, the structure's dry stone walling survives five courses high. Dark, charcoal-rich occupation deposits were identified within, yielding limited quantities of worked lithics and small sherds of Neolithic pottery. Hence, during the excavation, we assumed that this structure was Neolithic. Two radiocarbon dates, however, indicate that it was actually used—and therefore probably (if not certainly) constructed—in the Middle Bronze Age, c. 1420–1130 cal BC. Samples were taken from two separate layers, one of which was situated immediately above the stone ‘floor’ of the structure and so can be considered to be associated with its primary occupation; the Neolithic finds within these deposits could be residual. The Middle Bronze Age activity, which relates to a period not usually associated with crannog occupation (Lenfert Reference Lenfert2013: 130–31), was not clearly suggested by any diagnostic material culture; radiocarbon dating reminds us that other incidences of re-use at these sites may not have left much, or indeed any, immediately dateable imprint.
Material recovered from the loch bed
The recovery of multiple ceramic vessels from the loch beds surrounding the islets provided the first indication of the sites’ Neolithic origins. Our work has subsequently confirmed and elucidated this pattern of substantial material deposition into the water. In total, parts of 59 different vessels have been recovered from the loch at Bhorgastail, and 73 from Langabhat (Figure 7).
At Langabhat, the quantities and condition of ceramics recovered from the loch and from surface excavations are completely different. While some pottery was deposited on the islet itself during its Neolithic occupation and use, the vast majority ended up in the water around it (Figures 7 & 10). The material recovered from the islet was generally abraded and fragmentary, whereas that from the loch is in very good condition and is substantially more complete (Table 2). The low-energy nature of the loch sediments—revealed by coring and diver survey, and supported by the slow sedimentation rates identified in lochs across the region (Lomax Reference Lomax1997: 144; Edwards & Whittington Reference Edwards and Whittington2001: 163)—suggests that the loch bed ceramics are unlikely to have been transported over any significant distance. They were almost certainly deposited directly into the water surrounding the islet.
The quantities of material now identified around several sites, and the position of these vessels in relation to the islets, suggests that pots were intentionally deposited into the water. Many vessels had substantial sooting on their external surfaces, and some had internal charred residues; they had clearly been used before deposition. The large fragment sizes of these vessels suggest that at least some, and possibly all, of the vessels were complete when they entered the water.
Radiocarbon dating
Eight radiocarbon determinations have been obtained from four islet sites across Lewis (Table 3). The six that fall within the Neolithic are quite closely grouped, ranging from c. 3640–3360 cal BC. The fact that the dates were obtained from worked structural timbers associated with Bhorgastail's construction and from pot residues associated with the four sites’ use potentially suggests a narrow window of occupation or use for all of them. Further dating, however, is required to refine this picture.
Summary
It is now clear that these sites are artificially constructed Neolithic islets, or crannogs. They were created by piling up rocks onto the loch bed, sometimes making use of existing natural features. The overall architecture of the islets was designed to create a flattish central area approximately 10m across. Although no Neolithic structures have been identified, only one site has so far been excavated. Whatever the function of these sites, the most apparent archaeological evidence is the presence of large numbers of pots deposited into the water around the islets.
Discussion
Settlement, monumentality and deposition in the Neolithic
It is now apparent that islet construction was a widespread practice in the Outer Hebrides during the Neolithic. The possibility of an early date for crannog construction, first raised by the excavation of Eilean Domhnuill, has now been realised—in Lewis at least. Nonetheless, despite this confirmation of previous suspicions, there are clear differences between Eilean Domhnuill and those sites that we have reported here. The former was a much larger islet than either Bhorgastail or Langabhat. It also produced clear evidence for Neolithic stone structures right from the latest levels; no such evidence has been forthcoming from our sites. Excavation at Eilean Domhnuill produced an assemblage of 22 000 ceramic sherds; by contrast, Langabhat yielded 12 sherds. As at other Lewis sites, however, many large fragments were recovered from the loch around Langabhat islet—a pattern of deposition as yet not recognised at Eilean Domhnuill, although the loch bed there was not thoroughly investigated (Dixon Reference Dixon1989). Hence, Eilean Domhnuill and Langabhat are not directly comparable sites, and Neolithic artificial islets in the Outer Hebrides appear to have been neither used nor perceived in a uniform way.
In order to approach a broadly contextualised interpretation of our sites, it is helpful to revisit some earlier discussions of Eilean Domhnuill. Armit has suggested, for example, that it may have been a place of special significance in the landscape, albeit one of impermanent occupation:
its permanence, its monumentality, its peculiar location, and the repeated renewal of its buildings, combine to suggest that it played a pivotal role in the cultural landscape of Neolithic North Uist comparable with the role played by the better-known funerary monuments (Armit Reference Armit, Armit, Murphy, Nelis and Simpson2003: 99).
Cummings and Richards (Reference Cummings, Richards and Richards2013: 198–200) compared travelling to Eilean Domhnuill on a causeway across the water with the journey along the tunnel-like passageways of contemporaneous passage grave tombs; others have commented on the site's isolation and ‘liminal’ location (Henley Reference Henley2003: 137; Cummings & Richards Reference Cummings, Richards and Richards2013). Most recently, Copper and Armit (Reference Copper and Armit2018)—now aware of the newly discovered Lewis islet sites—have suggested that they could have been special places associated with social gatherings, ritualised feasting and commensality.
The Lewis islet sites certainly have a monumentality of their own that is comparable with contemporaneous passage graves. They would have required a huge investment of labour to build and probably remained significant places for a long time. Such islets may well have represented substantial symbols for, and of, the communities that constructed them. These islets could also have been perceived as special places, their watery surroundings creating separation from everyday life. The process of crossing over to the islets may have emphasised this separation; the practices that took place on them do appear to have been very different from those of ‘normal’ life. These may have included feasting, involving the pots that were subsequently deposited into the surrounding water. The activities that occurred on these islets could have resembled those that happened at tombs elsewhere across the Outer Hebrides. It is even conceivable that the islets were themselves associated with mortuary practices, the evidence for which is so far rendered invisible by watery deposition and the acidic local soils.
The Lewis islets, therefore, may be viewed as falling somewhere in between tombs and settlements, in relation both to their architecture and to the practices associated with them. The position of the islets within their broader contemporaneous landscape has implications for the overarching narratives that we currently construct about the Neolithic—in both the Outer Hebrides and more widely across Britain, and beyond. Perhaps most notably, these sites remind us to question the binary opposition sometimes assumed between Neolithic ‘settlement’ and ‘monuments’. In the Outer Hebridean Neolithic, ‘settlements’ were not a uniform category of site. They comprised different architectures, were situated in varied landscape locations and were associated with sometimes extremely different assemblages and, undoubtedly, different practices (Garrow & Sturt Reference Garrow and Sturt2017: 19–22). It is possible that tombs were equally varied in their character. Indeed, many writers have commented on the variable architectures of Neolithic monuments in the region (Henshall Reference Henshall1972; Armit Reference Armit1996; Cummings & Richards Reference Cummings, Richards and Richards2013); too few, however, have been excavated for any assessment of their exact usage. Similarly, very little research has been conducted on the landscapes immediately surrounding these monuments; we cannot presently tell whether comparable acts of deposition to those evidenced at the Lewis islets also occurred at tombs. While categorising sites is, of course, useful in framing our discussions, we must also be mindful of the fact that such categories can also be blurred, internally variable and confusing.
Neolithic crannogs beyond the Outer Hebrides?
As discussed at the outset, while the Outer Hebrides represent a particularly dense hotspot for crannogs, this type of site is widespread across the rest of Scotland and Ireland. Although recent dating programmes have improved the situation dramatically (Crone Reference Crone, Midgley and Sanders2012), only a small proportion of these sites have any associated dating evidence. Cavers (Reference Cavers2010: 26) reported 44 radiocarbon dated crannog sites in Scotland, while Crone's (Reference Crone, Midgley and Sanders2012: 140) more recent survey listed 52, including three also dated using dendrochronology. Cavers (Reference Cavers2010: 26) noted an additional 60 sites datable through material culture or literary references. Estimates for the total number of crannog sites in Scotland vary, depending on exactly which site types are included; most agree that many unrecorded sites remain absent from our lists (as Murray's work in Lewis clearly demonstrates). Lenfert's (Reference Lenfert2013: 123) total of 571 ‘island dwellings’ is the most inclusive in terms of the site types it incorporates and is therefore arguably the most accurate estimate of site numbers. Combining these figures, we ascertain that approximately 10 per cent of known sites have been radiocarbon dated, with diagnostic material culture recovered from a further 10 per cent. We therefore have chronological information—which, it should be noted, often dates only a single phase of a site's construction or use—for approximately 20 per cent of known crannogs.
Convincing arguments can be made both in favour of and against the possibility that Neolithic crannogs may exist beyond the Outer Hebrides. First, in arguing against this suggestion, it must be emphasised that no Neolithic radiocarbon dates or material culture have so far been recovered from crannog sites elsewhere in Scotland (Cavers Reference Cavers2010; Crone Reference Crone, Midgley and Sanders2012). To counter this, however, it should be noted that 80 per cent of all known sites have no associated dating evidence at all. It is also worth bearing in mind that, prior to Armit's work in the 1980s and then Murray's work in 2012–2014, no convincing Neolithic crannogs had been identified in the Outer Hebrides either; now, six sites are known. Before our in-depth work, the Neolithic origins of the five Lewis sites had been suggested only through material culture recovered from the loch beds around them—a context that has been investigated systematically at very few other sites. In Ireland, the single Late Mesolithic/Early Neolithic radiocarbon date on a timber from the crannog at Inch Island (Fredengren Reference Fredengren2002: 120), and the sometimes very substantial quantities of Neolithic material culture recorded from some ‘later’ sites (O'Sullivan Reference O'Sullivan1998: 59–68), suggest the possibility of Neolithic crannogs in Ireland: “it could be that the basal deposits on many Early Historic crannog sites provide an insight into the true extent of Neolithic lakeside settlement” (O'Sullivan Reference O'Sullivan1998: 62).
Bearing in mind the complexities of establishing an accurate date for the earliest phases of (mostly unexcavated and often multi-phase) crannogs across Scotland (see Crone Reference Crone, Midgley and Sanders2012), it is difficult to say much more. The Outer Hebrides, as a region, certainly could have had a coherent and strong internal dynamic during the Neolithic—as demonstrated by the very regional-specific ‘Hebridean’ pottery, for example. Such a dynamic could have led to a localised tradition of artificial islet construction. Yet, at the same time, the region was clearly culturally connected to mainland Scotland, Ireland and Orkney—as demonstrated by shared tomb types, imported axes and the supra-regional ‘Unstan’ pottery style. We should therefore certainly keep an open mind to the possibility that Neolithic islet sites could be identified elsewhere by future investigations.
Summary
Building upon Murray's initial underwater discoveries, our research has demonstrated the widespread presence of Neolithic crannogs in the Outer Hebrides, finally confirming previous scholarly speculation about the possibility of their existence (beyond Eilean Domhnuill). We have also ascertained in some detail the characteristics of two previously undiscovered sites. Our results suggest that Neolithic crannogs were not necessarily used in a uniform way across the region. The practices in evidence at, and character of, the Lewis islets forces us to reconsider the nature of Neolithic settlement, monumentality and deposition on a much broader scale. Essentially, in relation to the wider British Neolithic, this is a new type of site, which breaks down traditional site categories and further illuminates the depositional practices of that period. It is exciting to anticipate what further survey and excavation of other Neolithic crannogs across the Outer Hebrides—and possibly beyond—may reveal.
Acknowledgements
The research described here was generously funded by the British Academy/Levehulme Trust/Honor Frost foundation and the Society of Antiquaries of London. We have benefited a great deal from the advice and support of many individuals: Deborah Anderson, Ian Armit, Mike Bamforth, Graeme Cavers, Mike Copper, Anne Crone, Aidan O'Sullivan, Joshua Pollard, Niall Sharples and Graeme Warren. We are grateful to the excavation/survey team of Jonathan Benjamin, Stephanie Blankshein, Joel Bush, Mike Copper, Crystal El Safadi, Dave Godwin, Bob Mackintosh, Chris Murray, Rodrigo Ortiz, Rodrigo Pacheco-Ruiz, Felix Pedrotti and Dan Pascoe for their hard work, good humour and multi-faceted expertise; to Michael Skelly for his logistical support; to Hugo Anderson-Whymark, Mike Copper, Anne Crone, Matt Law, Don O'Meara, Robyn Veal and staff at ORAU and SUERC for undertaking specialist analyses that have contributed significantly to our understanding of these sites; to Stephanie Blankshein and Felix Pedrotti for their dedicated work in processing the photogrammetric models; to Alison Sheridan for introducing us to these sites and for her continued support towards the project; to Kevin Murphy (Comhairle nan Eilean Siar) for his long-term support; to Donnie Macaulay, George MacLeod, Mary Macleod, Alex McDonald, Iain Maciver and the Stornoway Trust, and Margaret McKay and Lewis Island Crofters Ltd for their generosity in allowing us access to the sites; to Anwen Cooper, Mike Copper and two anonymous referees for their helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper. Finally, we would like to express our gratitude to Chris Murray for finding these sites and for all his help and generosity since then. This article is dedicated to the memory of his good friend Mark Elliot, and to George MacLeod, both of whom cared deeply about these sites.