
Skara
Brae
Orkney's Neolithic Village
Skara
Brae (HY232188), by the shore of the Bay of Skaill, is virtually unique.
This remarkably well preserved village is one of very few archaeological
sites where it is actually possible to imagine the life style of the
inhabitants. First revealed after a severe storm in 1850, this prehistoric
community was occupied for about 600 years. Radiocarbon dating suggests
that the site was occupied from before 3100 BC to about 2600 BC.
The group
of six houses and a workshop is connected by a covered close, and all
the buildings except for the workshop were buried to the tops of the
walls by midden. This clay-like mixture of refuse consists of ashes,
shells, bones, sand and other domestic detritus and has been a major
factor in protecting the site from erosion. It seems that the occupants
had built the midden around their houses intentionally as an integral
part of the construction. It appears to have been stored and used deliberately
rather than piled round existing houses. Damp-proof courses had also
been invented over 5,000 years ago. The foundations of the houses have
a layer of blue clay in the bottom course which would have worked as
well as polythene does today.
5,000 years
ago the Bay of Skaill may have been much smaller, with more sand dunes
and perhaps a freshwater loch behind the dunes. The village would have
been behind this lagoon amid pasture much like exists today. Abandonment
was very likely caused by encroaching sand, perhaps because of a great
storm which set the sand dunes in motion and overwhelmed the village
in a short time, as at the sands of Forvie more recently. However it
continued in use for some time after this, as there were several occupation
layers in the sand which filled the houses.
The houses
vary in size from over 6m square to barely 4m square, with a maximum
surviving wall height of 2.4m. The designs are quite similar (was
there a local builder at work in Orkney in 3000 BC?) with beds, dressers,
tanks in the floor, cupboards in the walls and cells off the main
room. The cells in some cases have drains, possibly for toilet purposes
and are very similar to the cells in chambered cairns. Each house
has a central fireplace and a doorway exiting to the main passage.
These doorways were small, about 1.1m high by 0.6m wide and there
was provision to fasten the door from the inside.
What
remains today is like an animal skeleton. There would have been driftwood
from America available for furnishings and materials such as animal
sheep skins, leather and eider down, as well as caisies, cubbies and
the original Orkney chairs. There is no evidence of fabrics being
used and no remains of anything to do with weaving. No spindles or
whorls were found, so it is very unlikely that they could spin wool
either.
The roofs
could have been supported by couples made of driftwood or whalebones
and been covered with skins or turf. There was probably a central
hole as in a blackhouse to let out the smoke and let in some light.
House 7 has holes in the top courses of stones which look like they
are for the fitting of joists. As whales were much more abundant,
strandings would have been more frequent 5,000 years ago. One blue
whale ashore in the Bay of Skaill would have provided enough rafters
for a village much bigger than this while the skin would have made
an excellent roof covering!
One
building, hut 8, was apparently the workshop, as it has no beds and
is differently arranged. Many fragments of chert, which had been heated,
were found on the floor. In the absence of flint this stone was used
to make cutting and scraping tools. The people made pottery, in sizes
up to 60cm diameter. This was often decorated with geometric patterns
and is classed as Grooved Ware. Bone was
much used for tools and jewellery, but wood was also used. Red ochre
was found in small stone containers, suggesting that decoration was
also used.
The soil conditions
were not favourable for the preservation of wood and thus very little
has survived. However there would have been plenty of driftwood from North
America and it is very likely that wood was used for many purposes. The
villagers must have had reasonably good boats to go fishing as they did.
No doubt these craft had wooden frames with leather covering, while fishing
lines could have been made from animal gut or sinews.
No
evidence has been found of anything which could not have come from Orkney,
suggesting a self-sufficient life-style. This does not exclude contacts
with other groups, or even with Mainland Scotland, which can be seen
from Sandwick. Boats good enough to fish off to the west of Orkney are
certainly adequate to cross the Pentland Firth.
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