Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T10:52:20.786Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Early Settlement of Scotland: Excavations at Morton, Fife1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2014

Extract

The Mesolithic settlement at Morton lies some six miles north-north-west of St. Andrews in Fife, Scotland (fig. 1). The area around the site, north-eastern Fife, is surrounded on three sides by water, and projects as a blunt peninsula into the North Sea. The river Eden and the Firth of Tay serve as southern and northern boundaries of this peninsula, which consists today principally of the wind-deposited sands of Tentsmuir. The area of Tentsmuir, now afforested, is one of the relatively few regions in Britain where land is building up into the North Sea, and this process has been in action for many centuries (Sissons, 1967).

The Tentsmuir Sands are a prolific source of later prehistoric and early historic finds, the earliest yet known being of the late third millennium B.C. In February 1957, while searching for such material on Tentsmuir, Mr R. Candow of Tayport collected some flints from molehills and other exposures on the high ground of the ‘Old Quarry’ field at Morton Farm (National Grid Reference NO 467257). Surface collections continued to be made until 1963 when excavations of the site were undertaken by Mr Candow in collaboration with Dundee Museum and Art Gallery (Candow, 1966). A total of 41 trenches were excavated between May 1963 and April 1967, and these are shown on the plan of site A (fig. 4, no. 1–41). In November 1967, site B in the same field was discovered and partially excavated (fig. 29, no. 51), before work was suspended and the writer was invited to continue the investigations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bishop, A. H., 1914. ‘An Oronsay shell-mound—a Scottish pre-Neolithic site’, PSAS, XLVIII, 52108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Candow, R. D. M., 1966. ‘Preliminary investigations of a Mesolithic site at Morton Farm, Tentsmuir’, Aspects of Antiquity, Abertay Historical Society Publication, XI, 43–8.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1932. The Mesolithic Age in Britain. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1934. ‘A Late Mesolithic settlement site at Selmeston, Sussex’, Ant. J., XIV, 134–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1936. The Mesolithic Settlement of Northern Europe. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1954. Excavations at Star Can. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1955. ‘A Microlithic Industry from the Cambridgeshire Fenland and other Industries of Sauveterrian affinities from Britain’, PPS, XXI, 320.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D. and Rankine, W. F., 1939. ‘Excavations at Farnham, Surrey (1937–38): the Horsham Culture and the Question of Mesolithic Dwellings’, PPS, V, 61118.Google Scholar
Cole, H. A., 1956. ‘Benthos and the shellfish of commerce’, in Graham, M. (ed.), Sea Fisheries. London, Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Coles, J. M., 1964. ‘New Aspects of the Mesolithic Settlement of South-West Scotland’, Trans. Dumf. and Gall. Nat. Hist, and Ant. Soc., XLI, 6798.Google Scholar
Coles, J. M. and Higgs, E. S., 1969. The Archaeology of Early Man. London.Google Scholar
Cormack, W. F. and Coles, J. M., 1968. ‘A Mesolithic Site at Low Clone, Wigtownshire’, Trans. Dumf. and Gall. Nat. Hist, and Ant. Soc., XLV, 4472.Google Scholar
Cullingford, R. A. and Smith, D. E., 1966. ‘Late-glacial shorelines in Eastern Fife’, Trans. Inst. Br. Geogr., XXXIX, 3151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Degerbol, M. and Fredskild, B., 1970. The Urus (Bos primigenius Bojanus) and Neolithic domesticated cattle (Bos taurus domesticus Linné) in Denmark.Google Scholar
Donner, J. J., 1970. ‘Land-sea level changes in Scotland’, in Walker, D. and West, R. G. (ed.), Studies in the Vegetational History of the British Isles, 2340.Google Scholar
Geikie, J., 1880. ‘Discovery of an ancient canoe in the old alluvium of the Tay at Perth’, The Scottish Naturalist, V, 17.Google Scholar
Godwin, H., 1956. The History of the British Flora. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Graham, M., 1924. ‘The annual cycle in the life of the mature cod in the North Sea’, Fishery Invest., II, 6, 6: 177.Google Scholar
Higgs, E. S., 1959. ‘The Excavation of a late Mesolithic site at Downton, near Salisbury, Wiltshire’, PPS, XXV, 209–32.Google Scholar
Hutcheson, A., 1886. ‘Notice of the discovery of a stratum containing worked flints at Broughty Ferry’, PSAS, XX, 166–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kressler, D. K. and Lemon, J. M., 1951. Marine Products of Commerce. New York, Rheinhold.Google Scholar
Lacaille, A. D., 1954. The Stone Age in Scotland. London.Google Scholar
Leakey, L. S. B., 1951. ‘Abinger Common, Surrey. Preliminary Excavations’, Surrey Arch. Soc. Res. Rep. 3.Google Scholar
Leroi-Gourhan, A. and Brezillon, M., 1966. ‘L'habitation magdalenienne no. 1 de Pincevent près Montereau (Seine-et-Marne)’, Gallia Préhistoire, 9 (2).Google Scholar
Malsburg, J. von, 1911. ‘Uber neue Formen des Kleinen Diluvialen Urrindes Bos (urus) minutus’, N. Sp. Anz. d. Akad. d. Wiss. Krakau, Math-naturw. Kl. Reihe. Nr. 5.Google Scholar
Mathewson, A., 1879. ‘Notes on stone cists and an ancient kitchen midden near Dundee’, PSAS, XIII, 303–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meighan, C. W., Pendergast, D. M., Swartz, B. K. Jr., and Wissler, M. D., 1958. ‘Ecological Interpretation in Archaeology: Pt. I’, Amer. Ant., 24, no. 1, 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mercer, J., 1968. ‘Stone Tools from a Washing-limit deposit of the highest Post-glacial transgression, Lealt Bay, Isle of Jura’, PSAS, C, 146.Google Scholar
Mulholland, B., 1970. ‘The Microlithic Industries of the Tweed Valley’, Trans. Dumf. and Gall. Nat. Hist, and Ant. Soc., XLVII, 81110.Google Scholar
Newcomer, M. H., 1971. ‘Some quantitative experiments in handaxe manufacture’, World Archaeology, 3, 8594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paterson, H. M. L. and Lacaille, A. D., 1936. ‘Banchory Microliths’, PSAS, LXX, 419–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radley, J. and Mellars, P., 1967. ‘A Mesolithic Structure at Deepcar Yorkshire, England, and the Affinities of its associated Flint Industries’, PPS, XXX, 124.Google Scholar
Rae, B. B. and Lamont, J. M., 1964. ‘Rare and exotic fishes recorded in Scotland in 1961’, Scott. Nat., 71 (2), 3946.Google Scholar
Rankine, W. F. and Dimbleby, G. W., 1960. ‘Further Investigations at a Mesolithic Site at Oakhanger, Selbourne, Hants’, PPS, XXVI, 246–62.Google Scholar
Rendall, R., 1956. Mollusca Orcadensia. Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd.Google Scholar
Rosenfeld, A., 1971. ‘The Examination of use-marks on some Magdalenian end scrapers’, in Sieveking, G. (ed.), Prehistoric and Roman Studies, 176–82.Google Scholar
Rütimeyer, I., 1867. ‘Geschichte des Rindes’, Denkschr. d. Schweiz. Naturf. Ges.Google Scholar
Semenov, S. A., 1967. Prehistoric Technology. London.Google Scholar
Shawcross, F. W., 1967. ‘An investigation of prehistoric diet and economy on a coastal site at Galatea Bay, New Zealand’, PPS, XXXIII, 107–31.Google Scholar
Shawcross, F. W. and Higgs, E. S., 1961. ‘The excavation of a Bos primigenius at Lowe's Farm, Littleport’, Proc. Camb. Ant. Soc., 54.Google Scholar
Sieveking, G. de G., Craddock, P. T., Hughes, M. J., Bush, P. and Ferguson, J., 1970. ‘Characterization of prehistoric flint mine products’, Nature, 228, no. 5628, 251–4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sissons, J. B., 1967. The Evolution of Scotland's Scenery. Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Suess, H. E., 1967. ‘Bristlecone pine calibration of the radiocarbon time scale from 4100 B.C. to 1500 B.C., in Radioactive Dating and Methods of Low-level Counting, Vienna.Google Scholar
Treganza, A. E. and Cook, S. F., 1948. ‘The Quantitative investigation of aboriginal sites: complete excavation with physical and archaeological analysis of a single mound’, Amer. Ant., 23, no. 4, 287–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vaufrey, R., 1936. Préhistoire de l'Afrique. I Le Maghreb. Pub. de l'Institut des Hautes Éitudes de Tunis, Vol. 4.Google Scholar
Vita-Finzi, C. and Higgs, E. S., 1970. ‘Prehistoric Economy in the Mount Carmel Area of Palestine: Site Catchment Analysis’, PPS, XXXVI, 137.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1960. ‘Three microlithic industries from south-west England and their affinities’, PPS, XXVI, 193201.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1963. ‘A Reinterpretation of the Microlithic industries of Wales’, PPS, XXIX, 99132.Google Scholar
Wheeler, A., 1969. The fishes of the British Isles and north-west Europe. London, Macmillan.Google Scholar