Skara Brae
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Origin | Ranafast |
---|---|
Ireland | |
Albums | Skara Brae |
Genres | Folk Music |
Celtic Music | |
Record labels | Gael-Linn Records |
Gael Linn | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2472764 |
About Skara Brae
Skara Brae were an Irish traditional music group from Kells, County Meath with origins in Ranafast, County Donegal. The group consisted of three siblings, Mícheál Ó Domhnaill, Tríona Ní Dhomhnaill, and Maighread Ní Dhomhnaill, with Dáithí Sproule from Derry.
Formal bid made for Flow Country Unesco status
... Scottish locations with the Unesco status include the St Kilda archipelago, Skara Brae prehistoric village and the Antonine Wall...
Scotland's crannogs are older than Stonehenge
... Another famous Neolithic site is Skara Brae, a village in Orkney inhabited between 3200 BC and 2200 BC...
Is Orkney the best place to live in the UK?
... Skara Brae is a Unesco world heritage site, older than Stonehenge and the Great pyramid was The Italian chapel built by prisoners of war during the second world war the people in Orkney you will also enjoy one of the lowest crime rates in Scotland, with 5...
Scotland's crannogs are older than Stonehenge
Neolithic pottery was previously found near crannogs in the Western Isles
Archaeologists have discovered that some Scottish crannogs are thousands of years older than previously thought.
Crannogs were fortified settlements constructed on artificial islands in lochs.
It was thought they were first built in the Iron Age , a period that began around 800 BC.
But four Western Isles sites have been radiocarbon dated to about 3640-3360 BC in the Neolithic period - before the erection of Stonehenge's Stone Circle .
The prehistoric monument in Wiltshire is One of Britain's best-known Neolithic features. Stonehenge's Stone Circle was erected in the late Neolithic period, about 2500 BC.
Another famous Neolithic site is Skara Brae , a village in Orkney inhabited between 3200 BC and 2200 BC.
One of the crannogs in the Western Isles has a stone causewayArchaeologists Dr Duncan Garrow , of University of Reading, and Dr Fraser Sturt, from the University of Southampton, investigated four crannog artificial islands in The Isle of Lewis in the Western Isles.
At One of the sites well-preserved Neolithic pottery had previously been found on The Loch bed by Chris Murray , a former Royal Navy diver who lives in Lewis.
The archaeologists' investigation included making underwater surveys and carrying out excavations at the sites to obtain "conclusive evidence of artificial islet construction during the Neolithic ".
Four crannogs in the Western Isles were found to date to the Neolithic periodThe archaeologists, said the crannogs represented "a monumental effort" through the piling up of boulders on The Loch bed, and in the case of a site in Loch Bhorgastail The Building of a stone causeway.
They said it was possible other Scottish crannogs, and similar sites in Ireland, were also Neolithic .
Previously it was thought crannogs were built and re-used over a period of 2,500 years from the Iron Age to the post-medieval period.
archaeology, university of southampton, stonehenge, university of reading, isle of lewis
Source of news: bbc.com