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15 December, 2016 00:00 00 AM
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Forget Dubai, Brits were building islands 5,000 years ago

Amanda Ruggeri
Forget Dubai, Brits were building islands 5,000 years ago

Dubai has Palm Jumeirah; Bahrain, the Amwaj Islands. But man-made islands are hardly a new idea. Thousands of years before today’s nations began constructing artificial islands, prehistoric people in the British Isles were doing the same.

Known as “crannogs” and build in lakes or lochs, some of these fortified islands date back as far as 5,000 years ago. Unlike similar constructions found in the European Alps – which were built on land that only flooded in later centuries – crannogs were always built to be artificial islands.
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Supported by piles driven into the lake bed, some have several roundhouses on them. The more popularly recognised version is a single roundhouse on a platform. And they are unique to Scotland and Ireland. In Scotland, more than 350 have been confirmed, though the actual number could be far greater.
Despite the number of crannogs, archaeologists say that finding one can be like discovering a treasure chest. That is because, since most of these prehistoric dwellings are now completely underwater, they have often survived better than if they had been exposed on land – sometimes still retaining even the bracken that covered the floor.
“It’s very exciting,” says Nick Dixon, director and founder of the Scottish Trust for Underwater Archaeology, who with Barrie Andrian leads the excavation of Oakbank crannog on Loch Tay in Kenmore, Scotland. “You’re lying on an Iron Age person’s house floor after 2,500 years; there are bracken and ferns, still absolutely identifiable.”
Started in 1980, the Oakbank dig was the first underwater excavation of a crannog in Scotland. Today, it is only about halfway through.
The potential to rewrite prehistory – and history, actually – is enormous – Barrie Andrian 
One reason it has taken so long to excavate stems from a problem every archaeologist would like to have. From the crannog’s timbers to wooden dishes and even grains that people ate, the site today is a 10ft-high mound of material that measures some 35,000 cubic feet, all of which must be excavated by divers.
“There’s a wealth of information down there, and the potential to rewrite prehistory – and history, actually – is enormous,” Andrian says.
Oakbank is hardly alone. It is just one of 18 crannogs that have been surveyed in 13-mile-long Loch Tay alone.
Their construction recreates the original crannog as best they can 
But Loch Tay is not unusual. Beneath their surface, many of Scotland’s lochs hide the remains of a dozen crannogs or more, most of them dating to the same eras – around either the 5th or 2nd Centuries BC.
The number of crannogs is remarkable because building a crannog is not an easy task. Dixon and Andrian know because they did it themselves, creating Scotland’s only reconstructed prehistoric crannog at the Scottish Crannog Centre.
Set further down Loch Tay from their Oakbank excavation, their construction recreates the original crannog as best they can by drawing on findings they have made from the dig. Where they have not found evidence yet – for instance, for a roof – they have relied on outside sources and experimentation to see what works.
There is one key difference from the original: to make it accessible for visitors, there is a small bridge that leads to it from the shore. Other than that, Andrian and Dixon have tried to remain as true to its original structure as they can. There is no metal in the entire recreated structure 
However, it is important to note, as researchers like Graeme Cavers of AOC Archaeology have pointed out, that even if it their reconstruction were completely accurate, it could only show a crannog as it was at a single point in history. Most crannogs, including Oakbank, were re-used off and on for the next 2,500 years. One example lies just across from the reconstructed crannog on Loch Tay: Priory Island, which was reused in the 12th Century as a priory and today is completely wooded. What is remarkable is how comfortable the crannog is.
While it looks small from the outside, inside it seems to open up. Andrian and Dixon estimate that some 20 or so people, likely an extended family, would have lived within a crannog of this size.
The roof is thatched. Bracken and ferns provide a prehistoric version of plush carpet. Furs are draped over low benches, and a hearth in the middle would have provided warmth and light.
There is no metal in the entire recreated structure, meaning no iron nails, screws, bolts or cables. Instead, everything is made from wood and organic materials.
Because it is a pleasant day, the other benefit of the crannog is less immediately obvious: it is an ideal design for the Scottish climate. The conical roof is aerodynamic, and since the structure is made of timber, the whole settlement moves and flexes, a particularly important feature for an area that can see 100mph winds and pounding waves from the loch.
Building that kind of dwelling requires a high level of skill. It also needs abundant resources.
Their whole mindset is a million miles away from ours, mainly because they’re not watching the clock; they’re watching the seasons 
The reconstruction needed enough straight trees for 168 individual timber piles drilled into the loch bed, not to mention the entire structure above.
“We learned pretty quickly that getting raw materials was an issue: where do you get lots of nice, straight trees? If you look around here, you see there are lots of nice straight trees – alder trees,” Dixon says, gesturing to the thick forest that surrounds the loch. “And that’s exactly what people used. So we realised we had to cut these trees down in the winter, and start building in the springtime. If you ran out, you didn’t want to go cutting trees in the summer. And this has been held up with evidence from other sites.”
It is impossible to know just how long it would have taken these early settlers to build their crannogs. On the one hand, they were cutting down trees with bronze axes that blunted easily; on the other hand, they would have been honing their skills since they were children.
In some ways, it does not matter. “What you’ve got to remember is that their whole mindset is a million miles away from ours, mainly because they’re not watching the clock; they’re watching the seasons,” Dixon says. “Nobody’s coming and saying, ‘Oh, it’s 10 o’clock’. But it would have taken quite a long time.”
Which leads to the main question: why did they go to all of this trouble in the first place?
Given the number and the diversity of crannogs, researchers say that there is no single answer. But because all crannogs are set off from land – often with a gate, or some kind of other barrier, at one end – most researchers are comfortable saying they were built to be defensive, even if they were rarely used for actual warfare.
They’re saying, ‘We’re the people that live here. Want to come and fight with us?’ – Nick Dixon 
The main giveaway that crannogs were not entirely meant for military use is their highly visible location.
“Nobody’s hiding away here,” says Dixon. “If you go 10 miles up the loch on the road, you can look down and see this on a sunny day. So no one’s hiding. They’re saying, ‘We’re the people that live here. Want to come and fight with us?’”
In that sense, the crannogs may be a little like the mysterious hill forts of Wales, which appeared around the same period. They were probably built partly to be a stronghold in case of attack but, equally, to look like they would be a stronghold in the case of attack. In other words, to impress everyone else.
Crannogs “represent a highly visible imprint on the landscape, clearly designed to look impregnable but also making a statement of presence,” writes Cavers in his paper “Crannogs as buildings: The evolution of interpretation 1882-2011”. And it is not just crannogs: “Through the later first millennium BC, domestic architecture became the principal investment of farming communities, standing in stark contrast to the monumental communal tombs and stone circles of earlier centuries.”
But if this idea is true, it raises the question of why people began paying more attention to defence or status at this specific time.
In Loch Tay, of the 13 crannogs that have been radio-carbon-dated, nine date back to the same period as Oakbank. Four others seem to have been built 2,400 and 1,800 years ago. Those two spikes in activity – one in the mid-first millennium BC, the second toward the end of the millennium – echo a trend seen throughout Scotland. Even a change of a few degrees means people have to move down from the higher lands 
In part, this may have stemmed from the same reason that caused a boom in Welsh hill forts in the same period: climactic deterioration.
Around 536 BC, there was a well-documented catastrophe – likely caused by one if not two volcanic eruptions, or perhaps a series of comet impacts – that covered the Northern Hemisphere in a haze of dust. This caused crops to fail and made it colder and wetter. After another volcanic eruption around 210BC, when another dust veil appeared, the climate worsened again.
As researchers Mike Baillie and David Brown, among others, have pointed out, these events line up with a spike in building crannogs in both Ireland and Scotland.
“In an area like this, even a change of a few degrees means people have to move down from the higher lands,” where cut rocks and stone circles point to earlier inhabitants, says Dixon.
With so many crannogs in the loch, there are so many answers that are just waiting to be discovered 
At Loch Tay alone, he adds, “We think around 500 people are moving down to the loch side. Because of pressure on land, people are being more defensive. And these crannogs are defensive settlements.”
Andrian and Dixon are hoping that the continued excavation of Oakbank may provide a clearer picture. But, as the centre and excavation are entirely self-funded, they are limited in what they can do – particularly in terms of expanding to any of the other sites in the loch.
“It’s kind of frustrating that we’re not able to get in, and do more, and train more people to get involved and carry on the research,” Andrian says. “With so many crannogs in the loch, there are so many answers that are just waiting to be discovered.”    - BBC 

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Editor : M. Shamsur Rahman
Published by the Editor on behalf of Independent Publications Limited at Media Printers, 446/H, Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1215.
Editorial, News & Commercial Offices : Beximco Media Complex, 149-150 Tejgaon I/A, Dhaka-1208, Bangladesh. GPO Box No. 934, Dhaka-1000.

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