Liddle Burnt Mound

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

File:Ancient house at Liddle - geograph.org.uk - 54648.jpg

Liddle Burnt Mound is a Bronze Age site on the island of South Ronaldsay, Orkney. The site consists of the remains of a building and a mound that surrounds it on three sides.Hedges 1985, p. 17 The purpose of the site is controversial, but most investigators believe burnt mounds hosted a "domestic function",Ovrevik 1985, p. 145 perhaps related to cooking.

Description

The Liddle Burnt Mound is located on Liddle Farm; the farmer, Ronald Simison, had been using the mound as a quarry for road metal until he came across stone structures in 1972.Ritchie 1995, p. 94 He alerted Colin Renfrew who was excavating at Quanterness. John Hedges, a member of his team, investigated the site and recognized the remains of a stone building at the centre of the mound. The building is oval with thick external walls. From these, interior walls project into the main room creating compartments, one of which houses a hearth. In the centre of the structure is a large recessed, stone tank, lined with flagstones and rendered waterproof by the surrounding clay. The capacity of the tank is nearly one thousand litres and it was found half filled with stones that were shattered and "fired" by intense heat.Hedges 1985, p. 18 Hedges originally thought that the building represented a house, but he was troubled by the distribution of features; for example, there is no obvious place to sleep.

The surrounding mound still rises to a height of {{convert|2|m|ft}} in places, and calculations suggest an original volume of at least {{convert|200|m3|ft3}}.Hedges 1985, p. 19 It consists primarily of shattered stone, charcoal, and ash. Artifacts recovered from the mound include hammerstones, pot lids and pottery. These items, combined with the tank and hearth found in the building, suggest that the site was used for cooking. Burnt bones of goat and sheep support this interpretation,Ovrevik 1985, p. 146 which was put to the test with an experiment in Orkney where a leg of lamb was cooked in a stone tank heated by a peat fire.Hedges 1985, p. 21

Dating of materials excavated from the mound indicate that the site was in use between 1200 and 500 BC.Ritchie 1995, p. 95

Alternate interpretations

There are more than 200 known burnt mounds in Orkney and almost as many known in Shetland. They are also found throughout the British Isles. O'Kelly suggested that burnt mounds represent temporary hunting camps used for cooking joints of meat.O'Kelly 1954 However, bone is only occasionally reported from burnt mound sites, as at Liddle, which might seem unusual for a cooking site. This has been explained by the soils being too acidic for the bone to be preserved, but it would seem unlikely that all of the soils relating to burnt mounds were so acidic that no bone survived, particularly as the pH of the soil will vary considerably from site to site. There are examples of burnt mounds on neutral or basic soils, without bone being apparent.Barfield 1991 It has also been suggested that burnt mounds were saunas or used in salt or leather preparation.Barfield 1987

Isbister Chambered Cairn

Liddle Farm is also the site of Isbister Chambered Cairn, popularly known as the Tomb of the Eagles.

See also

Footnotes

{{reflist|2}}

References

  • {{cite journal | last = Barfield | first = L H |author2=Hodder, M A | title = Burnt mounds as saunas, and the prehistory of bathing | journal = Antiquity | volume = 61 | pages = 370–379 | year = 1987}}
  • {{cite journal | first = L H | last = Barfield | title = Hot stones: hot food or hot baths? | journal = Burnt Mounds & Hot Stone Technology (ed) Hodder, M A & Barfield, L H | pages = 59–67 | year = 1991}}
  • {{cite book | last = Hedges | first = John W. | title = A guide to Isbister Chambered Tomb and Liddle Burnt Mound| publisher = The Isbister and Liddle Trust | year = 1985 | isbn = 0-9510554-0-2}}
  • {{cite journal | last = O'Kelly | first = Michael J | title = Excavations and experiments in ancient Irish cooking-places | journal = The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland | volume = 84 | pages = 105–155 | year = 1954}}
  • {{cite book | last = Ovrevik | first = Sandra| chapter = The Second Millenium and After | editor-last = Renfrew | editor-first = Colin | title = The Prehistory of Orkney BC 4000-1000 AD | publisher = Edinburgh University Press | year = 1985 | isbn = 0-85224-456-8}}
  • {{cite book | last = Ritchie | first = Anna | title = Prehistoric Orkney | publisher = B.T. Batsford Ltd.| year = 1995 | location = London | isbn = 0-7134-7593-5}}

{{Prehistoric Orkney}}

{{coord|58.7457|N|2.9174|W |format=dms |region:GB_type:landmark |display=title}}

Category:Archaeological sites in Orkney

Category:Bronze Age sites in Scotland

Category:Prehistoric Orkney

Category:Mounds