Monument record 831 - CNIP, BHALTOS, LEWIS

Summary

Bronze Age cist, Viking Age cemetery

Location

Grid reference NB 09900 36400 (point)
Map sheet NB03NE
Island Lewis
Parish UIG, Western Isles

Map

Type and Period (2)

Full Description

NB03NE 15 09 36. Findspot of rich female Viking Age inhumation.

See also NB13NW 13, Viking burials at NB 100 365.

The excavation of a Bronze Age cist burial took place during fieldwork concentrated on the adjacent putative Norse burials, which lay c10m to its NW.
Excavation revealed an orthostatic, slab-lined, sub-rectangular cist with maximal internal dimensions of 1.2m from E to W by 0.9m from N to S. This contained a well-preserved crouched adult inhumation. The skeleton was enveloped within a distinct stained sand, deriving from the decay of the soft body parts and/or textiles. An intact undecorated vessel lying beside the skull was the only gravegood present.
An arc of stones immediately above the orthostats of the cist represents the basal course of a corbelled vault above the burial chamber. This suggests that the cist must have been situated within a now eroded mound. The cist had been inserted through the existing ground surface, a small patch of which was preserved on the N side of the cist. Elsewhere all sand deposits outside the cist are almost entirely scoured. A rough arc of boulders around 1.5m from the S and W of the cist may have delimited the extent of the mound.
Archive and publication reports of fieldwork results are currently in preparation.
Sponsor: Historic Scotland
CFA 1992.

no.15
This is the site of a probable Norse cemetery of unknown extent. The first burial to be excavated was a rich female grave removed by the local Procurator Fiscal in 1979. Subsequently a child burial was excavated in 1991 by Trevor Cowie, some 40m north-east in an adjacent sand blow-out (SMR no. 1702). In 1992 the Centre for Field Archaeology excavated three further burials some 10m east of the rich female grave. It is anticipated that further burials remain in the area. The site is currently under active sand erosion and deflation. Sand depth over the areas yet to be eroded prevents any reliable results from geophysical survey.
Armit 1992, 46

In August 1994 two further Viking Age graves were excavated beside the three adult burials recorded in 1992 (supra). Further erosion within a deflation hollow on the SE slopes of Cnip headland had revealed human bones in an eroding sand face less than 1m W of the 1992 excavations. A bone pin, two amber beads and a small quantity of human bone were recovered by a representative of Historic Scotland during an initial site inspection.
Subsequent excavation revealed a substantially eroded grave, comprising a rounded scoop filled by light brown sand, and containing an infant orientated NW-SE. Only the skull and upper left torso of the skeleton were preserved in situ. A single amber bead was recovered from beneath the jaw, suggesting that it had formed part of a necklace.
During cleaning of areas of exposed ground surface contemporary with the Viking Age cemetery a second grave was located adjacent to that detailed above. Upon excavation, it contained an undisturbed flexed neonate inhumation orientated approximately E-W. A small lump of iron, as yet unidentified, was located beneath the rear of the skull. The burial lay within a rounded scoop measuring 0.66m E-W by 0.48m by up to 0.20m deep and containing a light brown sand fill. As with the other burial, no surface marking of the grave was evident.
Cleaning of exposed areas of ground surface on a terrace up to 3.8m wide revealed no evidence for further graves within c 9m SW and c 6m NE of the excavated grave group. The burials excavated in 1992 and 1994 therefore appear to have formed a discrete cluster, possibly reflecting familial or kinship relationships. The grave group lay on a level patch of ground, and it is likely that the graves were deliberately sited on a terrace on the hillside. No evidence for any formal boundary to the cluster of graves was identified.
Three other eroding features were examined during fieldwork. A cluster of stones c 1.5m across, located c 1m N of a multi-phase Bronze Age cairn excavated by J Close-Brooks in 1976 and 1978, had been identified as a possible cist roof. No structure was revealed within the stones; two pits at least 1m in diameter were partly revealed in the trench immediately to the E of this. The stones lay on a Bronze Age cultivated soil previously identified by Close-Brooks, indicating that the features were broadly contemporary with the adjacent cairn.
A disturbed cobble hearth was identified c 15m NE of the calm. An irregular patch of dark grey sand lay adjacent to the hearth. Two iron objects, possibly tacks or rivets, a lump of iron slag, and several lumps of charcoal were recovered from this deposit.
Approximately 40m SW of the Viking Age grave group an alignment of four stones orientated N-S, exposed within an erosion face over 1m high, was investigated. The stones lay within a layer of pale yellow sand immediately beneath the present turf horizon; the stones overlay a sequence of sand deposits. The date and function of the feature is unclear. A fifth stone, possibly part of a slumped upper course, partly overlay one of the stones, but no deposits abutted the stone alignment.
Sponsor: Historic Scotland.
CFA 1994y.

63: NB 0990 3630
Burial
Arrangement of stones within an actively eroding sand deflation scar that may represent the end of a grave and rests on top of a paleosol, possibly the same one noted under the kerb cairn immediately to the north (smr 53).
Burgess & Church 1996, 35

NB 0995 3645 Considerable active erosion was noticed in the dunes above Berie Sands. Fragments of bone, shell, undecorated pottery, a boat rivet and the pivot section of a probable pair of scissors were found on a buried land surface on the section of a large erosion hollow. The location is believed to be close to that of a number of Viking graves excavated in the 1970s.
The site was reported to the local archaeologist and the artefacts handed in to Stornoway Museum.
Clydesdale, A 1999, 94


PSAS, 1978-80, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 543 (Bibliographic reference). SWE8442.

Ian Armit, 1992, Archaeological Field Survey of the Bhaltos (Valtos) Peninsula, Lewis (Bibliographic reference). SWE41031.

CFA, 1992a, Discovery and Excavation, Scotland, 83 (Bibliographic reference). SWE25397.

I Armit, 1994, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, No.15, 82, 83 (Bibliographic reference). SWE34817.

CFA, 1994y, Discovery and Excavation, Scotland, 96-7 (Bibliographic reference). SWE33089.

A J, T and T G Dunwell, Neighb, 1995, Proc Soc Antiq Scot (Bibliographic reference). SWE36228.

A J, T G, M F, T and A R Dunwe, 1995, Proc Soc Antiq Scot (Bibliographic reference). SWE36241.

Christopher Burgess and Michael Church, 1996, Uig Landscape Survey: Interim Report 1 (Unpublished document). SWE41181.

Council for Scottish Archaeology, 1999, Discovery and Excavation iin Scotland (Bibliographic reference). SWE41183.

Sources/Archives (9)

  • --- Bibliographic reference: CFA. 1992a. Discovery and Excavation, Scotland. 83. 83.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: CFA. 1994y. Discovery and Excavation, Scotland. 96-7. 96-7.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: I Armit. 1994. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 124. 67-93, fiche 1:A4-G5. No.15, 82, 83.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: A J, T and T G Dunwell, Neighb. 1995. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 125. 279-88.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: A J, T G, M F, T and A R Dunwe. 1995. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 125. 719-52.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: Ian Armit. 1992. Archaeological Field Survey of the Bhaltos (Valtos) Peninsula, Lewis.
  • --- Unpublished document: Christopher Burgess and Michael Church. 1996. Uig Landscape Survey: Interim Report 1.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: Council for Scottish Archaeology. 1999. Discovery and Excavation iin Scotland.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: PSAS. 1978-80. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 110. 535-544. 543.

Finds (1)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Related Monuments/Buildings (2)

Related Events/Activities (2)

Record last edited

Jul 28 2005 2:24PM

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