A collection of Bronze Age finds are returning on loan to the island where they were found
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A collection of Bronze Age finds are returning on loan to the island where they were found
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Possible evidence of porridge-making in the Western Isles 4,000 years ago has been found on pottery recovered from the bottom of lochs.
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Items found during an archaeological dig near Stornoway have revealed people lived there thousands of years earlier than previously thought.
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https://www.pressreader.com/uk/the-herald-1130/20200622/281762746514403
Also here.
northern-times.co.uk/news/former-dornoch-man-discovers-5500-year-old-cup-in-loch-203536/
And here.
telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/06/21/ancient-cup-cup-discovered-hebrides-loch-former-royal-navy-diver/
A 2,000-year-old underground chamber has been uncovered during work to build a house on the Isle of Lewis.
The Iron Age souterrain was revealed during the digging of the foundations for the property in Ness.
Local archaeologists, husband and wife team Chris and Rachel Barrowman, are recording the souterrain.
Dr Barrowman said theories on the purpose of the stone-lined, flat stone-roofed structures included storing food.
continued...
Standing stones that are 5,000 years old are helping to boost the Western Isles economy by £4m a year, according to a new report.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-38920311
environmental survey for site on outskirts of Stornoway lodged with Scottish Government
Plans to build a controversial £200million windfarm on the outskirts of Stornoway have moved forward.
The developer – a partnership between Amec and French government-owned EDF Energy – wants to erect up to 50 giant turbines adjacent to a busy tourist route.
Now an environmental survey has been lodged with the Scottish Government, which has responsibility for deciding if the windfarm goes ahead due to the large scale of the scheme.
The proposal sparked fierce criticism after it emerged the community-owned Stornoway Trust signed a deal potentially committing crofters' grazings to the huge development for decades.
Stornoway Trust factor Iain MacIver said: "I am delighted with the recent progress the application has made.
"This application will be respectful and mindful of the impact on the local environment and habitats and this has been foremost in our thoughts as we have submitted the application.
"Our development partners have listened and learned from their previous application and we are committed to engaging and consulting with the local community during this project. I believe the appointment of a community co-ordinator will be integral to this process as we aim to form an ongoing partnership with the local community."
The environmental report covers all aspects of how the proposed windfarm would be assessed from an environmental perspective during the design, construction and operational phases.
It addresses surveys to include noise, visual impact, archaeology, ecology, tourism and hydrology. Bird studies started on the site last spring.
The current proposal follows the Scottish Government's refusal to approve a controversial plan for a £700million chain of 181 huge turbines up the length of Lewis. Depending on the number of turbines which receive planning permission, up to £1.5million is being offered annually in community benefit after electricity starts generating in three or four years.
Read more: pressandjournal.co.uk/Article.aspx/1932165?UserKey=#ixzz10QxDcFAx
A Neolithic cairn discovered on Lewis could force a controversial wind-farm plan to be redrawn.
Leisure tycoon Nicholas Oppenheim plans to build a 53- turbine wind farm at his Eisgein Estate on the island, but the presence of the cairn could help prove the site was "sacred land" to the prehistoric people who built the famous Callanish standing stones about 12 miles away.
The site lies on a range of hills within the proposed development area known as Cailleach na Mointeach (the Old Woman of the Moors) because the skyline resembles the profile of a woman when viewed from Callanish.
Every 18 and a half years, the Moon rises from her knees – as if being "born" – and then sets at a point framed by the 4,000-year-old stones. Several of the 53 turbines planned by Mr Oppenheim's Beinn Mhor Power company would interrupt this skyline.
Ian McHardy, an archaeologist, said his discovery of the cairn near the Old Woman's knees meant the site should be protected. "There's a five-metre diameter cairn with a curve round the edge of it, which is of typical neolithic construction," he said.
Mr Oppenheim said: "If there is something, it would be fascinating and the scheme would be amended. But I'd like to hear more about what it is."
This article: news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1123522006
"Plans to build the largest onshore wind farm in Europe have been approved by Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (Western Isles Council).
An application by Lewis Wind Power for a 209 turbine wind farm in North Lewis, costing £400m, was passed by 19 votes to eight on Wednesday evening.
It was approved despite more than 4,000 objections.
The council also approved by 22 votes to 7 an application by Beinn Mhor Power for 130 turbines on the Eishken Estate."
Full story:
An Account of some Remains of Antiquity In the Island of Lewis, one of the Hebrides. In a letter from Colin M'Kenzie, Esq to John M'Kenzie, Esq;
From Archaeologica Scotica: transactions of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland
Volume 1 (1792)