Secrets of Orkney's '˜Egypt of the North' to be unlocked

A major international study is underway on a tiny Orkney island known as the '˜Egypt of the North' given its wealth of archaeological finds.

Rousay is home to at least 160 archaeological sites with 5,500 years of history charted in less than a mile of its west coast.

Read More
Early 19th century whales found at Orkney archaeological dig

Major sites of interest on Rousay include the Midhowe Cairn, a chambered communal burial space which was build around 3,500BC and nearby Midhowe Broch, an Iron Age residence that was occupied between 200BC and 200AD.

Hide Ad
Looking across to the mainland from Rousay. PIC: UHI.Looking across to the mainland from Rousay. PIC: UHI.
Looking across to the mainland from Rousay. PIC: UHI.

Remnants of the Viking and Pictish period can also be found on the island with the 19th Century Highland Clearances also reflected through abandoned farms and churches.

Recent finds include a possible Iron Age settlement overlooking the sea at Swandro.

A team of international archaeologists have now arrived on Rousay to help unlock some of the questions still remaining about the distant past of this mysterious place.

Midhowe Broch, Rousay, which was occupied for around 400 years until 200 AD. PIC: UHI.Midhowe Broch, Rousay, which was occupied for around 400 years until 200 AD. PIC: UHI.
Midhowe Broch, Rousay, which was occupied for around 400 years until 200 AD. PIC: UHI.

The largest geophysics survey of the island will be conducted by an internationally renowned team from the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Römisch-Germanische Kommission (DAI) based in Berlin.

They will work archaeologists from the University of the Highlands and Islands Archaeology Institute on the study.

Professor Jane Downes, director of the UHI Archaeology Institute said, “We are very pleased and excited to be involved in this major international project on Rousay and we are looking forward to seeing the results from the cutting-edge geophysics technology that the team from DAI have brought with them.”

Hide Ad

The results from the survey will feed into the “Boyne to Brodgar” programme, a research project that examines Irish/Scottish Neolithic communities and their monuments.

View from Knowe of Yarso chambered cairn, Rousay. PIC: UHI.View from Knowe of Yarso chambered cairn, Rousay. PIC: UHI.
View from Knowe of Yarso chambered cairn, Rousay. PIC: UHI.

UHI will work over the long term with the team from Berlin, with a memorandum of understanding to be signed between the two institutes.

Hide Ad