Knap of Howar
The Knap of Howar is a Neolithic farmstead on the island of Papa Westray in Orkney, Scotland, comprising two adjacent, well-preserved dry-stone houses constructed circa 3300–3200 BC, making it among the oldest standing stone buildings in northwest Europe.[1] The structures, oriented end-on to the sea, feature thick walls up to 1.6 meters high, internal hearths, stone cupboards, and benches, reflecting a mixed agricultural economy with evidence of barley and wheat cultivation alongside domesticated animals.[2] Excavations began in 1930 by local archaeologists who initially misdated the site to the Iron Age, but 1970s work by Anna Ritchie confirmed its Neolithic origins through radiocarbon dating, with recent 2025 reassessments indicating potential Mesolithic activity prior to occupation spanning until abandonment before 2900 BC.[3][1] Artifacts including stone tools, maceheads of antler and whalebone, and animal bones underscore daily life, while the site's association with Grooved Ware pottery aligns it with later Neolithic innovations.[1] The Knap of Howar provides crucial insights into prehistoric domestic architecture and coastal settlement patterns in northern Britain.[4]Location and Discovery
Geographical Setting
The Knap of Howar is situated at coordinates 59°20′58″N 02°54′38″W on the west coast of Papa Westray, one of the smallest inhabited islands in the Orkney archipelago off northern Scotland.[5][6] This low-lying coastal position places the site amid a dynamic shoreline environment, where prehistoric structures now stand exposed due to ongoing geological processes. Originally constructed inland behind protective coastal dunes during a period of lower sea levels, the settlement benefited from natural shelter and proximity to productive land.[2][7] Over millennia, coastal erosion and post-glacial sea-level rise have shifted the site's exposure, eroding the dunes and bringing the ruins perilously close to the cliff edge overlooking the North Sea.[8][9] The surrounding landscape consists of flat, fertile machair soils—calcareous sandy plains formed from shell-rich beach deposits—highly suitable for Neolithic agriculture, supporting crops and livestock in this remote island setting.[7][10] The site's nearness to the North Sea provided essential marine resources, while its location within the broader Orkney context links it to other early settlements, such as Skara Brae on Mainland Orkney.[2] The name "Knap of Howar" originates from Old Norse terms, with "knap" denoting a small hill or knoll, and "Howar" derived from "haugr," meaning mounds or barrows, alluding to the prehistoric burial mounds dotting the vicinity.[11][3]History of Excavation
The Knap of Howar site was first exposed by winter storms in 1928–1929 on the northwest coast of Papa Westray in Orkney, revealing stone structures buried under sand dunes. Local landowner William Traill and antiquarian William Kirkness identified the remains during field surveys shortly thereafter, around 1928–1930.[12] Initial excavations were conducted in 1930 by Traill and Kirkness, who cleared debris from the two adjacent stone-built houses and dug a perimeter trench, uncovering basic artifacts such as shells and tools but producing limited documentation due to the amateur nature of the work. The site was taken into state guardianship in 1937, with basic consolidation and a protective sea wall constructed to combat coastal erosion.[12][13] A major professional excavation occurred in 1973 and 1975 under archaeologist Anna Ritchie of the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland (now part of National Museums Scotland), affiliated with the University of Edinburgh, which expanded on the earlier efforts by removing internal deposits, excavating adjacent middens, and sinking test pits to recover stratified Neolithic remains. These works confirmed the site's early Neolithic date and preserved its structures during consolidation.[14][11] Post-excavation analysis culminated in the 1983 publication of findings by Ritchie in the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, detailing the site's architecture, artifacts, and chronology. A 2025 reassessment, published in the same journal and based on 2014 fieldwork commissioned by Historic Environment Scotland, reaffirmed the structural integrity of the houses and refined the occupation timeline through new radiocarbon analysis, without major re-excavation.[14][12] Preservation efforts have been overseen by Historic Environment Scotland since the site's guardianship in 1937, with stabilization completed in the 1970s; the site's exceptional completeness has precluded full re-excavation, focusing instead on monitoring and minimal intervention to protect it from ongoing sea erosion.[2][12]Architecture and Layout
House 1
House 1, the larger and primary dwelling at the Knap of Howar Neolithic farmstead, measures approximately 10 meters in length by 5 meters in width internally, forming an oblong structure with rounded corners. Its walls, constructed from local flagstone slabs in a dry-stone technique with inner and outer faces filled with midden material, reach up to 1.6 meters in height and are about 1.5 meters thick. The building features a single narrow entrance via a short paved passageway, approximately 1.7 meters long and 0.75 meters wide, located on the northwest side facing the sea, complete with door checks and a stone sill.[15] Internally, House 1 is partitioned into two rooms by low stone slabs (about 0.68 meters high) combined with timber posts, creating distinct spaces for different activities. The outer room, covering roughly 26.5 square meters, includes a low stone platform (18 cm high) along the south wall, interpreted as a recessed bed, and additional stone-built stalls or benches along the walls for seating or sleeping. The inner room, slightly smaller at under 21 square meters, contains a central circular hearth approximately 0.8 meters in diameter with a shallow ash-filled hollow, as well as a built-in stone recess or cupboard in the north wall equipped with shelves and niches for storage. The floor consists of compacted earth in the inner room and partial flagstone paving in the outer room, overlaid with layers of occupation debris.[16] The roof was likely low-pitched and constructed from turf or thatch, supported by wooden beams evidenced by post holes for internal posts that also aided in holding up partitions and possibly wall cupboards. This structure served as the main living space for a small family unit, accommodating sleeping, cooking around the hearth, and storage needs within its compact layout. House 1 connects to the smaller House 2 via a low passageway in the northern wall, which was later deliberately blocked with stones, suggesting a shift in use over time.[15]House 2
House 2 at the Knap of Howar is a smaller, oblong structure adjacent to the main dwelling, measuring approximately 7.5 meters by 3 meters internally, constructed using similar flagstone techniques as House 1 but with notably thinner walls averaging 1.0 meter in thickness and a core filled with midden material.[16] The building features rectilinear walls with rounded corners and drystone facings, standing to a maximum height of 1.26 meters.[15] Access to House 2 is provided through a short, paved passageway—about 2.4 meters long and 0.76 meters wide—directly from the interior of House 1, with a lintel positioned at roughly 1.0 meter above the floor; this entrance was later blocked, possibly due to structural instability.[11] Internally, the space is partitioned into three compartments by low dry-stone walls and upright flagstones, creating distinct areas that suggest specialized use.[16] Unlike the primary house, there is no central hearth; instead, two smaller hearths occupy the corners of the two largest compartments—one primary kerbed and paved hearth measuring 0.65–0.70 meters in diameter, and a secondary hollow hearth of 0.9 meters.[16] Built-in furnishings are limited, including a rough stone bench along the north wall of the middle compartment (1.0 meter wide and 2.4 meters long) and five stone-built cupboards recessed into the rear wall of the innermost compartment, which contained artifacts such as grinding stones, pottery sherds, and animal bones indicative of processing activities.[16] One of the compartments may have served as a stall or pen, evidenced by its configuration and the presence of animal bone fragments.[16] The roof of House 2 likely employed a similar corbelled design supported by internal timber posts, inferred from the pattern of wall collapse and debris, though it may have been lower than that of House 1 to accommodate its secondary role.[16] Evidence of modifications includes the blocking of entrances and possible later partitioning, suggesting adaptive reuse over time, with secondary floor deposits and reduced domestic debris compared to House 1.[16] Archaeologists hypothesize that House 2 functioned primarily as a workshop, storage space, or animal shelter rather than a main living area, supported by the concentration of tools like hammerstones and the scarcity of everyday household remains.[16]Artifacts and Economy
Pottery and Tools
The pottery assemblage from Knap of Howar consists primarily of Unstan ware, a distinctive Neolithic style characterized by grooved, incised, and stab-and-drag decorations on carinated bowls and jars.[16] Over 450 sherds were recovered, weighing approximately 21 kg, with the majority from primary midden deposits in House 1 (Period I) and fewer from secondary contexts in House 2 (Period II).[16] These vessels, made from hard, gritty local clay tempered with shell, grog, or quartz, feature slipped and occasionally burnished surfaces, round or flattened bases, and diameters ranging from 100 to 325 mm; they served for food storage, cooking, and possibly serving, reflecting domestic functions in the Orcadian Neolithic economy.[16] The Unstan ware style links the site to broader Orkney traditions, with parallels in chambered tombs like Unstan on Mainland, suggesting shared cultural practices or exchange networks across the islands.[16] Stone tools dominate the lithic inventory, crafted from local materials such as sandstone, flagstone, and dolerite, underscoring self-sufficiency in tool production.[16] Notable examples include a single polished dolerite axe (53 mm long), used for woodworking or clearing vegetation, and two large sandstone querns (one measuring 666 x 318 mm) with central grinding hollows for processing grains or pigments.[16] Additional implements comprise five to six borers and piercers from sandstone or flagstone, showing wear on pointed ends for perforation tasks; flagstone scrapers and Skaill knives (six examples), edge-retouched for cutting or hide preparation; and pitted grinding stones (three), alongside hammerstones (11).[16] Flint and chert artifacts, totaling over 30 worked pieces (2.05 kg overall), include end scrapers, knives, and a leaf-shaped arrowhead, imported from external sources and indicative of a mixed toolkit for hunting and crafting.[16] Bone, antler, and whalebone tools further illustrate the site's material culture, exploiting local faunal resources for utilitarian items.[16] Bone pins (several, 27-97 mm long) and needles from sheep or cattle bone served for fastening clothing or mats, while awls and points (over 30) exhibit split-pulley bases for leatherworking.[16] Antler implements include perforated hammers (116 mm), and whalebone artifacts feature a perforated macehead or hammer (102 x 74 mm), a knife or blade (145 x 47 mm) with use-wear striations, and a hoe or spatula, all from cetacean bones likely sourced from beached whales.[16] Additional finds encompass bone beads and possible fishing weights, with no metal objects present, consistent with the pre-Bronze Age chronology.[16] These tools align with Neolithic Orkney assemblages, such as those at Skara Brae, highlighting adaptations to island environments through versatile, multi-material technologies.[16]Subsistence Evidence
The faunal remains from the Knap of Howar primarily consist of bones from domestic cattle, sheep, and pigs, with cattle and sheep represented in roughly equal proportions and pigs occurring in smaller numbers.[14] These domestic species indicate a focus on animal husbandry, supported by stable isotope analysis of sheep and cattle tooth enamel, which reveals year-round grazing on terrestrial plants without evidence of seaweed supplementation, suggesting managed herding practices on the island's limited pastures.[17] Wild species are less common, with small quantities of red deer bones in occupation layers pointing to occasional hunting. Slaughter patterns, inferred from age-at-death profiles, show that approximately half of the cattle were killed in their first year, likely for meat, hides, and bone tools, while the presence of young lamb remains among sheep suggests possible dairying alongside meat production.[14] Botanical evidence includes charred grains of barley recovered from hearths and occupation deposits, alongside wheat pollen identified in a test pit, indicating small-scale arable farming adapted to the machair soils of Papa Westray.[18] Additional plant remains, such as hazelnut shells, suggest foraging complemented cultivated crops.[19] Marine resources were integral to the diet, as evidenced by extensive shellfish middens dominated by limpets (likely used as bait), with oysters, winkles, cockles, and razorshells present in significant quantities for consumption. Fish bones include species such as cod, saithe, ling, wrasse, and rockling, representing both inshore and offshore catches that indicate year-round, low-intensity fishing facilitated by the site's coastal proximity.[19] Isolated bones from seals and whales likely derive from scavenging rather than active hunting.[20] The overall economy at the Knap of Howar reflects a self-sufficient Neolithic farmstead, balancing agriculture, animal husbandry, foraging, and marine exploitation, with no indications of large-scale food trade.Chronology and Dating
Radiocarbon Dates
The initial radiocarbon dating of Knap of Howar stemmed from excavations conducted in 1973 and 1975 by Anna Ritchie, which produced uncalibrated dates from charcoal and bone samples indicative of early Neolithic occupation.[21] Key samples included material from the House 1 hearth (SRR-348: 2815 ± 70 BC uncalibrated) and animal bones from floor deposits (Birm-816: 2820 ± 180 BC uncalibrated), both calibrating to approximately 3500–2900 cal BC at 95.4% probability using standard curves.[21] Additional analyses on mixed animal bone from primary middens and wall cores yielded a broader calibrated range of 3800–2800 cal BC, confirming sustained use during the Neolithic period.[12] Subsequent redating efforts addressed limitations in the original bulk samples by employing accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) on single-entity specimens, such as sheep bones from sealed contexts beneath House 1 walls.[22] These AMS dates, calibrated with IntCal13 or later iterations, included OxA-16476 (4458 ± 39 BP: 3345–3020 cal BC) from a sheep scapula in a primary midden and OxA-16475 (4603 ± 39 BP: 3515–3350 cal BC) from another sheep bone in House 1 wall core material.[22] Calibration followed international standards like IntCal curves to enhance precision and account for atmospheric variations.[12] A 2025 reassessment integrated legacy and new AMS results from labs including SUERC and Oxford (OxA), refining the site's chronology to 3700–2900 cal BC at 95.4% probability.[12] This study resolved earlier discrepancies by modeling dates in OxCal software, mitigating biases from the old wood effect in charcoal samples and residuality in bone deposits.[12] Representative refined dates are summarized below:| Lab Code | Material | Context | Calibrated Range (95.4%, cal BC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| SUERC-60676 | Articulated cattle bone | Lower boundary, Phase 2 deposit | 3337–2943 |
| SUERC-60677 | Articulated cattle bone | Lower boundary, Phase 2 deposit | 3323–2920 |
| OxA-16475 | Sheep bone | Primary midden, House 1 wall core | 3515–3350 |
| Birm-817 | Organic soil | Test Pit 16 | 3900–3370 |