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Book Cover for: Black Loch of Myrton: The Life and Times of an Iron Age Wetland Settlement in Southwest Scotland, Anne Crone

Black Loch of Myrton: The Life and Times of an Iron Age Wetland Settlement in Southwest Scotland

Anne Crone

This monograph presents the results of excavations at an Iron Age wetland settlement at Black Loch of Myrton (BLM), located on the Machars peninsula in Wigtownshire, Scotland. Although first noted in the 1880s, the site remained unexamined until its rediscovery during modern drainage work. Excavations were carried out between 2013 and 2019 as part of the Scottish Wetland Archaeology Programme (SWAP), supported by Historic Environment Scotland and the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council. The project used a multidisciplinary approach, combining dendrochronology, radiocarbon dating, micromorphology, and multi-proxy environmental analyses.

The settlement, built on a natural peat island in a small loch, revealed three main episodes of occupation between the mid-5th and early 2nd century BCE. The earliest phase (c. 437 BCE) featured a log trackway, defensive palisades, and roundhouses. Around 425-420 BCE, the site expanded beyond the original boundaries with new roundhouses and an earthen rampart. A third phase (starting c. 278 BCE) involved substantial reconstruction of the perimeter defences using oak planks and palisades.

Excavation revealed exceptionally well-preserved wooden structures, hearths, and organic floor deposits. These finds allowed detailed reconstructions of domestic life, construction techniques, and the site's interaction with its environment. The site's deep stratigraphy and ecofactual remains - including plants, insects, animal bones, and lipid biomarkers - offer unique insights into living conditions, resource use, and spatial organisation.

Thanks to precise dating through dendrochronology and radiocarbon modelling, the research demonstrates that wetland settlements were an integral part of Iron Age life in northern Britain. These findings reshape our understanding of settlement patterns, defence, and resource management during the mid to late first millennium BCE.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Sidestone Press
  • Publish Date: Mar 19th, 2026
  • Pages: 630
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00lb
  • EAN: 9789464264272
  • Categories: ArchaeologyEurope - Great Britain - ScotlandAncient - General

About the Author

Crone, Anne: - Anne Crone is a Project Manager for AOC Archaeology Group, responsible for the management of post-excavation programmes through to publication. She specialises in the study of all aspects of ancient wood, both structural and artefactual, and has been instrumental in developing dendrochronology in Scotland. She is a leading expert in the study of Scottish crannogs and has undertaken excavation and research on these sites for many decades.
Cavers, Graeme: - Graeme Cavers is a Director of AOC Archaeology Group. He has a long-standing interest in wetland archaeology and, following completion of a PhD on crannogs and later prehistoric settlement, has taken an active role in the development of the Scottish Wetland Archaeology Programme's research into lake settlement in SW Scotland. He has directed excavations at several crannog sites in Argyll and Wigtownshire, and continues to pursue his interest in the archaeology of the Iron Age.