Shifting Sands: Links of Noltland, Westray by Hazel Moore
Links of Noltland is one of the most important Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements in Scotland. Contained within this uniquely preserved fragment of prehistoric landscape are the 5000-year-old houses, fields and burials of the first farmers and their descendants. The site lies on the exposed coastline of Westray in Orkney and was buried beneath sand dunes. With the rapid onset of erosion these remains are now exposed and at extreme risk of being lost forever.
A major programme of fieldwork commissioned by Historic Scotlandis now being undertaken by EASE Archaeology. Discoveries includea Neolithic farmstead, field walls, cultivation remains andartefact-rich middens, together with six Bronze Age buildingsand a contemporary cemetery.
Shifting Sands documents some of the most remarkable discoveries including the Westray Wife, a Neolithic stone figurine, now recognised as the earliest depiction of the human form known from Scotland and the Cattle Skull building with its foundation deposit of large skulls built into the walls. It also describes the Bronze Age remains, which represent the largest and most complete settlement of this date known in Orkney.
This project is radically changing our perceptions of life during the third and second millennia BC in Scotland and has relevance for studies of the period throughout Britain and Western Europe. This publication covers the archaeological discoveries, together with specialist analysis ofthe artefacts recovered during the excavations.