
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Experts working on "the largest archaeological excavation" of Hirta, part of the St Kilda archipelago, have discovered an Iron Age settlement. The island, west of north Scotland,
was home to an extensive Iron Age population 2,400 years ago, experts from Guard Archaeology discovered. Researchers discovered shreds of pottery from the ancient inhabitants. The pottery
was unlikely found in the exact place of the settlement as it had been washed into a stone channel. Traces of carbonised food could be found on the pottery, the researchers revealed. Using
radiocarbon dating of the food traces, researchers were able to date the settlers to between 400 and 100 BC. The Iron Age of Britain runs from roughly 800BC until the invasion of the Romans
in 43AD. While traces of pottery with food were discovered, no housing structures were. However, the pottery alone was enough to determine an "intensive" population across not only
Hirta, but all of the St Kilda islands, based on the 2011 discovery of an Iron Age settlement on the island of Boreray. The last residents of the St Kilda archipelago left the islands 90
years ago. READ MORE: BIBLE EXPERTS ‘CERTAIN’ TOWER OF BABEL REAL AFTER ‘COMPELLING CLUE’ “Stone was also cleared, including that in burial mounds to increase the available cultivation area,
leaving little trace of what may have been there before.” Susan Bain, the National Trust for Scotland’s manager for the Western Isles, said: “These results are very encouraging that the
evidence of very early settlements on the islands can still be identified. “We have tantalising glimpses of life on St Kilda 2,000 years ago, not only from their pottery but also the remains
of a souterrain, or underground store that was discovered in the 19th century. “These few clues tell us that people were well established on St Kilda as part of the wider settlement of the
Western Isles.”