Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T04:13:44.613Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Excavations at a Multi-period Site at Greenbogs, Aberdeenshire, Scotland and the Four-post Timber Architecture Tradition of Late Neolithic Britain and Ireland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2013

Gordon Noble
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Aberdeen, St Mary's, Elphinstone Road, Aberdeen AB24 3UF
Moira Greig
Affiliation:
Planning & Environmental Services, Aberdeenshire Council, Woodhill House, Westburn Road, Aberdeen AB16 5GB
Kirsty Millican
Affiliation:
Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), John Sinclair House, 16 Bernard Terrace, Edinburgh EH8 9NX

Abstract

This report outlines the unexpected discovery of a group of Late Neolithic structures at Greenbogs, Monymusk in Aberdeenshire, along with a series of later prehistoric features in the mid-1990s. Recent radiocarbon dating shows that two four-post timber structures found here date to the period 2890–2490 cal bc. These were found in association with a range of other features including an oval structure and diffuse areas of burning. The closest parallels for the four-post structures can be found in a slowly growing body of Late Neolithic timber structures, some being interpreted as roofed dwellings and others as roofed or unroofed monuments. This article places the Greenbogs structures in their wider context, identifies a number of unexcavated parallels in the aerial record and addresses the nature of the four-post structures found across Late Neolithic Britain and Ireland and suggests that four-post structures were a more common element of Late Neolithic architecture than previously identified. A common building type appears to have been shared across large areas of Britain and Ireland in a variety of contexts, from the seemingly mundane to the more ‘charged’, as part of elaborate monument complexes. The later prehistoric features identified at Greenbogs include a concentration of Middle Bronze Age features including graves containing cremated human bones, one with an upright urn, and a number of Iron Age pits and other features.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 2012

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

Anderson, J. 1883. Notice of urns in the Museum that have been found with articles of use or ornament. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 17, 446–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashmore, P.J. 1999. Radiocarbon dating: avoiding errors by avoiding mixed samples. Antiquity 73, 124–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ballin-Smith, B. 1994. Howe: four millennia of Orkney prehistory excavations 1978–1982. Edinburgh: Society of Antquaries of ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Barclay, G.J. 1996. Neolithic buildings in Scotland. In Darvill, T. & Thomas, J. (eds), Neolithic Houses in Northwest Europe and Beyond, 6175. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 57Google Scholar
Barclay, G.J. 2003. Neolithic settlement in the lowlands of Scotland: a preliminary survey. In Armit, I., Murphy, E., Nelis, E. & Simpson, D. (eds), Neolithic Settlement in Ireland and Western Britain, 7183. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Barclay, G.J. 2005. The henge and hengiform in Scotland. In Cummings, V. & Pannett, A. (eds), Set in Stone: new approaches to Neolithic monuments in Scotland, 8194. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Barclay, G. J. & Brophy, K. 2004. A rectilinear timber structure and post-ring at Carsie Mains, Meikleour, Perthshire. Tayside & Fife Archaeological Journal 10, 122Google Scholar
Barclay, G. J. & Russell-White, C. J. 1993. Excavations in the ceremonial complex of the fourth to third millennium BC at Balfarg/Balbirnie, Glenrothes, Fife. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 123, 43110CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bersu, G. 1940. Excavations at Little Woodbury, Wiltshire. Part 1: The Settlement as revealed by excavation. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 6, 30111CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourke, E. 1997. Appendix 2: towards a reconstruction of the Grooved Ware circular wooden structure. In Eogan, & Roche, 1997, 283–94Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 2001. The birth of architecture. In Runciman, W.G. (ed.), The Origin of Human Social Institutions, 6992. Oxford: University PressGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 2005. Ritual and Domestic Life in Prehistoric Europe. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 2007. The Prehistory of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge: University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. & Ellison, A. 1975. Rams Hill: a Bronze Age defended enclosure and its landscape. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. J., & Sheridan, J. A. 2005. Croft Moraig and the chronology of stone circles. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 71, 269–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Britnell, W. 1982. The excavation of two round barrows at Trelystan, Powys. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 48, 133202CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brophy, K. 2007. From big house to cult house: early Neolithic timber halls in Scotland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 73, 7596CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brophy, K. in press. Houses, halls and occupation in Britain and Ireland. In Fowler, C., Harding, J. & Hofmann, D. (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Neolithic Europe. Oxford: University PressGoogle Scholar
Brück, J. 1999. Ritual and rationality: some problems of interpretation in European archaeology. European Journal of Archaeology 2(3), 313–44Google Scholar
Burgess, C. 1995. Bronze age settlements and domestic pottery in northern Britain: some suggestions. In Kinnes, I. A. & Varndell, G. (eds), ‘Unbaked Urns of Rudely Shape’: essays on British and Irish pottery for Ian Longworth, 145–58. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 55Google Scholar
Burl, A. 1988. Four-posters: Bronze Age stone circles of western Europe. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 195CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, S. 1997. Micromorphological Analysis. In Pollard, 1997, 103–5Google Scholar
Cleal, R. & MacSween, A. (eds). 1999. Grooved Ware in Britain. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Coles, F.R. 1903. Report of the Stone Circles of North East Scotland. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 37, 82142CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, M., & Dunbar, L., 2008. Rituals, Romans and Roundhouses: Excavations at Kintore, Aberdeenshire 2000–2006, Volume 1: Forest Road. Edinburgh: STAR Monograph 8Google Scholar
Cormack, W.F. 1963a. Prehistoric site Beckton, Lockerbie. Transactions of the Dumfrieshire & Galloway Naturural History Society & Antiquarian Society 4, 111–6Google Scholar
Cormack, W.F. 1963b Burial site at Kirkburn Lockerbie. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 96, 107–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowie, T.G. 1993a. The Neolithic pottery. In Barclay, & Russell-White, C. 1993, 6576Google Scholar
Cowie, T. 1993b. A survey of the Neolithic pottery of eastern and central Scotland, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 123, 1341CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darvill, T. 1996. Neolithic buildings in England, Wales and the Isle of Man. In Darvill, T. & Thomas, J. (eds), Neolithic Houses in Northwest Europe and beyond, 77112. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 57Google Scholar
Darvill, T. 2006. Stonehenge: the biography of a landscape. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Darvill, T. & Wainwright, G. 2003. Stone circles, oval settings and henges in south-west Wales and beyond. Antiquaries Journal 83, 946CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Driscoll, S.T., Brophy, K. & Noble, G. 2010. The Strathearn Environs and Royal Forteviot Project (SERF), Antiquity Project GalleryGoogle Scholar
Eogan, G. & Cleary, K. forthcoming. Excavations at Knowth 6: The Neolithic archaeology of the large passage tomb at Knowth, Co. Meath. Dublin: Royal Irish AcademyGoogle Scholar
Eogan, G. & Roche, H. 1997. Excavations at Knowth 2: settlement and ritual sites of the fourth and third millennium BC. Dublin: Royal Irish AcademyGoogle Scholar
Gibson, A. 1999. The Walton Basin Project: excavation and survey in a prehistoric landscape 1993–7. York: Council for British Archaeology Research Report 118Google Scholar
Gibson, A. 2005. Stonehenge and Timber Circles (2 edn). Stroud: Tempus.Google Scholar
Green, M. 2000. A Landscape Revealed: 10,000 years on a chalkland farm. Stroud: TempusGoogle Scholar
Harding, D.W. 2004. The Iron Age in Northern Britain: Celts and Romans, natives and invaders. London: RoutledgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartwell, B. 2002. A Neolithic ceremonial complex at Ballynahatty, Co. Down. Antiquity 76, 526–32CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haggarty, A. 1991. Machrie Moor, Arran: recent excavations at two stone circles. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 121, 5194CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Healy, F. & Kinnes, I. 1993. The excavations. In Excavations on Redgate Hill, Hunstanton, 1970 and 1971, 1–77 in Bradley, R., Chowne, P., Cleal, R.M.J., Healy, F. & Kinnes, I., Excavations on Redgate Hill, Hunstanton and at Tattershall Thorpe, Lincolnshire. Gressenhall: East Anglian Archaeology 57Google Scholar
Hingley, R. 1992. Society in Scotland from 700 BC to AD 200. Proceeding of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 122, 753CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Innes, L. 2007. Emerging communities: excavations at Howmuir, Eweford Cottages, Biel Water, South Belton and Thistly Cross, with features from Pencraig Hill and Eweford West (1910 BC–AD 340). In Lelong, O. & MacGregor, G., The Lands of Ancient Lothian. Interpreting the Archaeology of the A1, 119–45. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Jobey, G. 1980. Green Knowe unenclosed platform settlement and Harehope cairn, Peeblesshire, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 110, 72113CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, M. 2009. Prehistoric pottery, 5–12 in R.H.M. White, P. Richardson & C. O'Connell. Prehistoric pit clusters and a rectilinear enclosure at Newton Road, Carnoustie, Angus, Tayside and Fife Archaeological Journal 15, 121Google Scholar
Lewis, S. 1846. A Topographical Dictionary of ScotlandGoogle Scholar
Loveday, R. 2006. Where have all the Neolithic houses gone? Turf – an invisible component. Scottish Archaeological Journal 30(1–2), 81104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacSween, A. 2002. Pottery report. In K. Cameron, The excavation of Neolithic pits and Iron Age souterrains at Dubton Farm, Brechin, Angus, Tayside & Fife Archaeological Journal 8, 3442Google Scholar
MacSween, A. 2008. The prehistoric pottery. In Cook, M. & Dunbar, L., Rituals, Roundhouses and Romans, Excavations at Kintore, Aberdeenshire 2000–2006, Volume 1: Forest Road, 173–89. Edinburgh: Scottish Trust for Archaeological ResearchGoogle Scholar
Mays, S.A. 1998. The Archaeology of Human Bones. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
McKinley, J.I., 1994. The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham Part VIII: the cremations. Gressenhall: East Anglian Archaeology 69Google Scholar
McKinley, J.I. 2004. Compiling a skeletal inventory: cremated human bone. In Brickley, M. & McKinley, J.I. (eds), Guidelines to the Standards for Recording Human Remains. Reading: Institute of Field Archaeologists Paper 7Google Scholar
Millican, K. 2007. Turning in circles: a new assessment of the Neolithic timber circles of Scotland. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 137, 534CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millican, K. 2009. Contextualising the Cropmark Record: the timber monuments of Neolithic Scotland. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of GlasgowGoogle Scholar
Noble, G. & Brophy, K. 2011. Big enclosures: the Late Neolithic palisaded enclosures of Scotland in their northwestern European context. European Journal of Archaeology 14(1–2), 6087CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker Pearson, M. 2007. The Stonehenge Riverside Project: excavations at the east entrance of Durrington Walls. In Larsson, M. & Pearson, M. Parker (eds), From Stonehenge to the Baltic: living with cultural diversity in the third millennium B, 125–44. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S1692Google Scholar
Parker Pearson, M., Chamberlain, A., Jay, M., Marshall, P., Pollard, J., Richards, C., Thomas, J., Tilley, C. & Welham, K. 2009. Who was buried at Stonehenge? Antiquity 83, 2339CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker Pearson, M., Pollard, J., Richards, C., Thomas, J., Welham, K. & Marshall, P. In press. Stonehenge. In Fokkens, H. & Harding, A. (eds), The Oxford Encyclopaedia of European Prehistory. Oxford: University PressGoogle Scholar
Pollard, J. & Robinson, D. 2007. A return to Woodhenge: the results and implications of the 2006 excavations. In Larsson, M. & Pearson, M. Parker (eds), From Stonehenge to the Baltic: living with cultural diversity in the third millennium B, 159–68. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S1692Google Scholar
Pollard, T. 1997. Excavations of a Neolithic ritual and settlement complex at Beckton Farm, Lockerbie, Dumfries and Galloway. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 127, 69121CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pope, R. 2007. Ritual and the roundhouse: a critique of recent ideas on the use of domestic space in later British prehistory. In Haselgrove, C. & Pope, R. (eds), The earlier Iron Age in Britain and the near continent, 204–28. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group 1995. The Study of Later Prehistoric Pottery: general policies and guidelines for analysis and publications. Southampton: Prehistoric Ceramics Research Group Occasional Publications 1 & 2 (revised 1997)Google Scholar
RCAHMS. 1994. South-East Perth: an archaeological landscape. Edinburgh: HMSOGoogle Scholar
RCAHMS. 2007. In the Shadow of Bennachie: a field archaeology of Donside, Aberdeenshire. Edinburgh: RCAHMSGoogle Scholar
Richards, C. 1993. Monumental choreography: architecture and spatial representation in Late Neolithic Orkney. In Tilley, C. (ed.), Interpretative Archaeology, 143–81. Oxford: BergGoogle Scholar
Richards, C. 2005. Dwelling Among the Monuments: an examination of the Neolithic village of Barnhouse, Maeshowe passage grace and surrounding monuments at Stenness, Orkney. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological ResearchGoogle Scholar
Samuels, S.R. 2006. Households at Ozette. In Sobel, E.A., Gahr, D. Ann Trieu & Ames, K.M. (eds), Household Archaeology on the Northwest Coast, 200–32. Michigan: International Monographs in Prehistory 16Google Scholar
Scheuer, L. & Black, S. 2004. The Juvenile Skeleton. London: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, J. A. 2007a. Dating the Scottish Bronze Age: ‘There is clearly much that the material can still tell us’. In Burgess, C., Topping, P. & Lynch, F. (eds), Beyond Stonehenge: essays on the Bronze Age in honour of Colin Burgess, 162–85. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, J. A. 2007b. From Picardie to Pickering and Pencraig Hill? New information on the ‘Carinated Bowl Neolithic’ in northern Britain. In Whittle, A. W. R. & Cummings, V. (eds), Going Over: the Mesolithic–Neolithic Transition in North-West Europe, 441–92. Proceedings of the British Academy 144Google Scholar
Sheridan, J. A. forthcoming a. pottery report: Culduthel Farm, Phases 7 and 8 (CSE06). In Cook, M., Excavations at Culduthel, HighlandGoogle Scholar
Sheridan, J. A. forthcoming b. Pottery and other ceramic material. In Atkinson, D. & Jones, E., Excavations at Meadowend Farm, Upper Forth Crossing, ClackmannanshireGoogle Scholar
Smyth, J. 2010. The house and group identity in the Irish Neolithic, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 111C, 131CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, J. 2007. The internal features at Durrington Walls: investigations in the Southern Circle and Western Enclosures, 2005–6. In Larsson, M. & Pearson, M. Parker (eds), From Stonehenge to the Baltic: living with cultural diversity in the third millennium BC, 145–58. Oxford: British Archaeological Report S1692Google Scholar
Thomas, J. 2010. The return of the Rinyo-Clacton Folk? The cultural significance of the Grooved Ware complex in Late Neolithic Britain. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 20(1), 115CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trieu, D.A.G. 2006. From architects to ancestors: the life cycle of plank houses. In Sobel, E.A., Gahr, D. Ann Trieu & Ames, K.M. (eds), Household Archaeology on the Northwest Coast, 5779. Michigan: International Monographs in Prehistory 16Google Scholar
Trieu, D.A.G., Sobek, E.A., & Ames, K.A. 2006. Introduction. In Sobel, E.A., Gahr, D. Ann Trieu & Ames, K.M. (eds), Household Archaeology on the Northwest Coast, 115. Michigan: International Monographs in Prehistory 16Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. & Longworth, I. 1971. Durrington Walls: Excavations 1966–1968. London: Report of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London 29Google Scholar
Waterson, R. 1997. The Living House: An Anthropology of Architecture in South-East Asia. London: Thames & HudsonGoogle Scholar
WEA, 1980. Recommendations for age and sex diagnoses of skeletons, Journal of Human Evolution 9, 517–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar