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Gavin
Morgan
28 May 2008
A
LITTLE known archaeological project to uncover why, when and how a
thriving Shetland township was completely buried by rising sands has
just packed up for another year.
The township of Broo, located at the south end of Shetland Mainland, was
one of the largest and most important in Shetland before it was
decimated sometime between the mid 17th and early 18th century.
The multilayered undertaking, known as the Shetland Islands Climate
and Settlement project, is using many different disciplines to find
out specific details about this environmental disaster.
These range from archaeology to geology to sediment core studies
from lochs as well as historical research in Shetland Museum and
Archives.
The area now known as Quendale Links was first surveyed by
researchers including Dr Gerry Bigelow from Bates College, Lewiston,
Maine USA in 1997, then later in 2002.
It was during the latter visit that they became aware of a “well
preserved” farm building buried under two metres of sand, about “two
kilometres from Quendale beach”.
It is this excavation that is now the focal point of the project and
has just finished its sixth season with Dr Bigelow leading a 13
strong team including 10 students from Bates.
The American funded project is sponsored by Bates College, the
University of Southern Maine and, in the 2005 season, the US
National Science Foundation through its Artic Social Sciences
programme.
Dr Bigelow said: “This project is part of an environmental history
project using archaeology as a tool to help us learn about what was
happening in the landscape.
“It is also a straight archaeology project in that we are interested
in what it was like for the people who were living in Broo as the
township was progressively engulfed in the moving sands.”
“Before this work started we knew that the township of Broo was
certainly lost before the mid 1700’s when there were some very
graphic accounts of its full destruction at that point.”
Theories abound about the cause of the disaster including the
“little ice age” when great storms were quite common, intensive
farming or the introduction of rabbits.
“We wanted to find out the dates and chronology of the whole process
and get a sense of whether it might be related to the little ice age
or more to changing land use like very intensive cultivation or even
rabbits really burrowing into the dune systems, making them more
susceptible to high winds.”
The farm building was believed to have belonged to the “fairly high
status” Sinclair family, but the site was probably not their
original home.
Dr Bigelow thinks that their first farm was moved from closer to the
sea during the course of the sand rising and they carried on living
in the second area even as the beach continued to advance rapidly
around them.
“It is quite dramatic, and it is possible that it may have been
buried in just the course of a few years and the people finally left
after over a metre of mixed sand and their farm refuse had
accumulated around the walls of the house.
“It must have been a terrible struggle. If you can imagine a house
in which the ground surface has risen over a metre. They actually
had to build little sets of stairs to climb out of the rooms in the
building we have excavated.
“This building is probably not the main house, judging by its
feature it was probably some kind of subsidiary stable or
storehouse, but people did live in it in the last phase,” he said.
Dating of the exact time that the family was forced to leave is
variable, but Dr Bigelow and his team are using different methods to
arrive at a more accurate date.
“We have a kind of scientific dating called Optically Stimulated
Luminescence (OSL) dating. It tells you when a layer has been buried
and excluded from light and we have a very nice set of dates that
run from 1670 to 1712 from that method.
“We also have some artefacts that were made in a relatively short
time period that appear to be from about 1690 to 1715,” He said.
Evidence that points to the Sinclair family’s high standing before
the disaster includes the discovery of artefacts such as window
glass and shards from a slate roof, but probably not off the
building being worked on.
“We have not found that many artefacts, and they are quite
fragmentary, but they fit the time period that other dating evidence
suggests, very well.
“They also fit the idea that these people were originally well off.
By the time the catastrophe was over though, they were virtually
bankrupt,” Dr Bigelow said.
OSL dating has also been used extensively at the Old Scatness Broch
excavations, an archaeological project that has received
significantly more publicity than the Broo dig.
Dr Bigelow and his team will be returning to the site again next
year and the long term aim is to make the public more aware of the
site and its historical importance by encouraging visitors.
“Some details would have to be worked out with the landowners and so
on. It is an unusual opportunity because there are a significant
number of standing 17th century buildings in Shetland, but most of
them are castles and forts,” Dr Bigelow said. |
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