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  • Stone found in Happy Valley

    This stone was found by Aiden MacDonald. Identified as quartzite by Peter MacFarlane. This rock is only found on Tiree as a beach cobble, rounded by wave action.
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  • Banks of Allt a’ Mhuilinn, Hynish

    In the NE banks of the stream Allt a’ Mhuilinn or An Allt Bhàn, a number of horizon can be seen, including charcoal. Some worked flints have been recovered here. It is now covered with gravel. Pictures taken in 2011.
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  • Hynish Lighthouse Shore Station

    Built by Alan Stevenson 1836–44.
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  • Elizabeth Gibb Collection

    Evelyn Elizabeth Balfour Gibb (née Milne) (1914–2000) was the daughter of Lady Frances Balfour, herself the daughter of the 8th Duke of Argyll. She married and lived in Sussex, but was a frequent visitor to the island, usually staying at The Lodge. She developed an interest in archaeology, and spent a lot of time in the 1970s and 80s roaming Tiree, particularly its Iron Age forts. She donated some material to the National Museum of Scotland, but this collection from 16 find spots was donated to An Iodhlann by her granddaughter Stephanie Clarke.

    Dun, Caolas (which one is not described): 1983; 4 small sherds, 2 large pieces of slag.

    Dun Mor Vaul: 13 thick sherds (2 rims, one of which is everted; 1 comb decoration), 1 possible lug.

    Dunes between Brock and Ruaig Post Office: 11 small sherds.

    Kirkapol: 1 sherd.

    Dùn an t-Sìthein, Gott: 13 sherds (1 flat base).

    Old Manse garden, Gott: 2 sherds.

    Island House (possible location): hammer/smoothing stone (see photo).

    Stream on boundary of Heylipol and Balinoe (NL 98686 42460): 9 sherds, 1 glazed pottery piece, 1 piece of slate, 1 of 3cm tapered nail, 1 hammer stone, whelk, limpet, scallop shells, animal bones and teeth, 4 bits of hard dark unidentified material.

    Barradhu, Hynish: 1 piece of pumice, 2 small smoothing stones, 1 piece of slag, 1 limpet shell, 3 pieces of iron (possible cartspring).

    Barradhu, Hynish (rock shelter): around 60 worked flints, 15 sherds (1 with comb decoration).

    Dunes between Hynish Farm and Dùn nan Cleite: 1 worked flint (awl), 3 sherds, 1 3-cm iron cylinder with two notches (see photo).

    Dùn na Cleite: 1972; 8 sherds (2 with everted rims and 1 with comb decoration), 1 worked flint, 3 animal teeth.

    Dùn Hiader: 1972. 5 sherds (1 decorated, 1 with an indented, raised cordon), 1 smoothing stone, 1 hammerstone, 1 piece of iron 2 cm long, 1 piece of burnt bone.

    Balephuil: 2 worked flints, 14 thick sherds, 1 small bone awl, 1 small pointed bone tool. ‘Sand dunes below Balephuil – just over the fence, not in the field you go down to the shore from, but the next along to the NW. 1982 May. Dr Brown knew this was an old settlement. Jean has a finger bone!’

    Balephetrish: 1 hammerstone.

    Sorisdale, Coll: 1 large fine sherd, 6 small sherds, 3 worked flints, 12 cowrie shells, 3 large pieces of bloom.

    Included was a note [about possible rock art]: ‘I’m sure I found some [cup marks] on the non-seaward side of Dun Moor Vaul above the well/spring. I have a photograph somewhere. Quite small depressions in a circle about 12 of them. [?] “votive” holes in rock in Crete. 1994. EG’
  • Cist, Port Snoig, Hynish

    Probably Neolithic or Bronze Age
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  • Trig point and cairn on Ben Hynish

    TP1276 on the summit of Ben Hynish was completed on 16 June 1946. Other trig points on Tiree are on Ben Hough and in Vaul, with Skerryvore Light (18.8 km away), Heaval on Barra (66 km) and Jura (84 km) also visible. The pillar was last maintained by the Ordnance Survey in 2001 but is now inactive. Its replacement is the Global Navigation Satellite System point at Tiree Airport.
    The pillar sits on an older cairn known as Tùr an t-Saighdeir ‘the cairn of the soldier’ which was a fishing mark, lined up with one on Kenavara. It used to be whitewashed. There may have been an older cairn on the site. The top of Ben Hynish is known as Mullach nan Càrnan ‘the summit of the small cairns’.
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  • An Fhang, Happy Valley

    The sheepfold at the north end of Happy Valley. It was built between 1850 and 1878. The west side has been almost completely covered by sand blow.
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  • Sluice gate and aqueduct, Ben Hynish

    This sluice gate and aqueduct was built by Alan Stevenson around 1840 to carry water down to the lighthouse shore station. It was collected in a dam, and used to scour out the box harbour when it fills with sand.
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  • Stone setting above Dùn Shiadair

    This oval stone setting containing a small mound may be a grave.
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  • Film showing evidence of iron-rich water

    ‘With its iron-rich bedrock, and with a flat, poorly draining and acidic hinterland, Tiree is likely to have been quite well-supplied with iron in the late prehistoric and Early Medieval periods. Many forms of the Lewisian gneiss complex have a high iron content, concentrated in its darker bands. This is slowly leached from the surface of the rock by water in a process of chemical weathering. Iron-oxidising bacteria then feed on this iron-rich water. In doing so, they produce nodules containing iron oxyhydroxide, which collect in the banks of small streams on the sliabh. This is bog iron. These flat landscapes cut by streams lined with darkly stained rocks, and pools of rust-coloured water with their characteristic iridescent film, were highly prized in late prehistoric and Early Medieval times. They are very common on Tiree. A plausible derivation of the Tiree primary settlement name Ruaig is ON *Rauðavík ‘the red inlet’ from the iron-rich water in its hinterland (see Gazetteer). The modern name of the moorland east of this settlement is G An Sliabh Dearg ‘the red moor’. Bog iron is a renewable resource, and an area can be re-harvested approximately every generation. Smelting and smithing were extremely fuel-intensive, however, and iron production and processing came at some environmental cost. Tiree’s woodlands are likely to have been much reduced by the Early Medieval period (see section 5.6.5). Most of the charcoal needed to create the high temperatures demanded must have been made by the controlled burning of peat over several days inside a turfcovered clamp. Bog iron nodules were first roasted to create surface cracks. Smelting was done in a small furnace called a bloomery. This was made from clay that was tempered with dung. After lighting a fire inside the furnace to dry the clay, the bog iron and peat-charcoal were loaded in equal proportions. After setting light to the mixture, the furnace was then pumped from below with bellows. Liquid waste slag collected at the base and could be drained through a small hole, leaving the sponge-like iron-rich bloom to be picked out of another hole with tongs. The bloom then had to be beaten and re-heated to purify it. Objects made with bog iron have a characteristic sheen due to the high silica content and are relatively rust-resistant. Bloomeries, with their unmistakable conical heaps of slag, were usually sited on the sliabh near the raw materials, and slag and pottery moulds have been found recently at Baca Charachain, a deflated dune in Balevullin.’ Holliday, J. (2021) Longships on the Sand, pp. 200–1.
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