Description

Book Synopsis
The discovery of archaeological structures in North Uist in 1974 after storm damage led to the identification by Iain Crawford of a kerb cairn complex, with a cist and human remains. Six years later he went back, and over the next three years excavated another cist with human remains in its kerbed cairn, many bowl pits dug into the blown sand, and down to two late Neolithic structures and a ritual complex. He intensively studied the environmental conditions affecting the site and was among the first archaeologists in Scotland to understand the climate changes taking place at the transition between late Neolithic and the early Bronze Age. The deposition of blown sand and the start of the machair in the Western Isles, including the rise in sea-level and inundations into inhabited and farmed landscapes, are all part of the complex story of natural events and human activities. Radiocarbon dating and modern scientific analyses provide the detail of the story of periods of starvation suffered by the people that were buried on the site, of the movement away of the community, of their attempts of bringing the ‘new’ land back into cultivation, of a temporary tent-like structure, and of marking their territory by the construction of enduring monuments to the dead.

Trade Review
'...Ballin Smith and her colleagues have produced a worthy volume that answers many questions concerning the complex transition period between the Neolithic and Bronze Age within an area of the British Isles that would have been seen by late prehistoric pastoralists as the edge of the known world.' – George Nash (2019): Current Archaeology

Table of Contents
Foreword - Malcolm Burr ;
Preface - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
Summary (English/Gaelic) ;
PART 1 Introduction - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
PART 2 The excavation record - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
PART 3 Dating and human remains ;
PART 4 The changing natural environment and subsistence farming ;
PART 5 Exploitation of natural resources and the uses of artefacts ;
PART 6 Discussion - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
PART 7 Conclusion - Life on the edge - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
Afterword – Iain and Imogen Crawford ;
Appendices: ;
1: Marine shell samples quantified by species ;
2: Pottery catalogue ;
Bibliography ;
Index

Life on the Edge: The Neolithic and Bronze Age of

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A Hardback by Beverley Ballin Smith

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    View other formats and editions of Life on the Edge: The Neolithic and Bronze Age of by Beverley Ballin Smith

    Publisher: Archaeopress
    Publication Date: 31/03/2018
    ISBN13: 9781784917708, 978-1784917708
    ISBN10: 1784917702

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    The discovery of archaeological structures in North Uist in 1974 after storm damage led to the identification by Iain Crawford of a kerb cairn complex, with a cist and human remains. Six years later he went back, and over the next three years excavated another cist with human remains in its kerbed cairn, many bowl pits dug into the blown sand, and down to two late Neolithic structures and a ritual complex. He intensively studied the environmental conditions affecting the site and was among the first archaeologists in Scotland to understand the climate changes taking place at the transition between late Neolithic and the early Bronze Age. The deposition of blown sand and the start of the machair in the Western Isles, including the rise in sea-level and inundations into inhabited and farmed landscapes, are all part of the complex story of natural events and human activities. Radiocarbon dating and modern scientific analyses provide the detail of the story of periods of starvation suffered by the people that were buried on the site, of the movement away of the community, of their attempts of bringing the ‘new’ land back into cultivation, of a temporary tent-like structure, and of marking their territory by the construction of enduring monuments to the dead.

    Trade Review
    '...Ballin Smith and her colleagues have produced a worthy volume that answers many questions concerning the complex transition period between the Neolithic and Bronze Age within an area of the British Isles that would have been seen by late prehistoric pastoralists as the edge of the known world.' – George Nash (2019): Current Archaeology

    Table of Contents
    Foreword - Malcolm Burr ;
    Preface - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
    Summary (English/Gaelic) ;
    PART 1 Introduction - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
    PART 2 The excavation record - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
    PART 3 Dating and human remains ;
    PART 4 The changing natural environment and subsistence farming ;
    PART 5 Exploitation of natural resources and the uses of artefacts ;
    PART 6 Discussion - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
    PART 7 Conclusion - Life on the edge - Beverley Ballin Smith ;
    Afterword – Iain and Imogen Crawford ;
    Appendices: ;
    1: Marine shell samples quantified by species ;
    2: Pottery catalogue ;
    Bibliography ;
    Index

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