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Revealing the Earliest Animal Engravings in Scotland: The Dunchraigaig Deer, Kilmartin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2022

Joana Valdez-Tullett
Affiliation:
Historic Environment Scotland – HES John Sinclair House 16 Bernard Terrace Edinburgh EH8 9NX UK Email: jvaldeztullett@gmail.com
Tertia Barnett
Affiliation:
Historic Environment Scotland – HES John Sinclair House 16 Bernard Terrace Edinburgh EH8 9NX UK Email: Tertia.Barnett@ed.ac.uk
Guillaume Robin
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh School of History, Classics and Archaeology William Robertson Wing, Old Medical School Teviot Place Edinburgh EH8 9AG UK Email: Guillaume.robin@ed.ac.uk
Stuart Jeffrey
Affiliation:
School of Simulation and Visualisation Glasgow School of Arts 167 Renfrew Street G3 6RQ Glasgow UK Email: s.jeffrey@gsa.ac.uk
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Abstract

The recent discovery of animal carvings in the Early Bronze Age burial cairn at Dunchraigaig (Kilmartin Glen, Scotland) prompts a re-evaluation of current knowledge of rock art in Britain. The deer and other quadrupeds represented in the monument are the first unambiguous depictions of prehistoric animals of prehistoric date in Scotland, and among the earliest identified in Britain and Ireland. This contrasts with the well-known abstract carvings of rock art in this region, characterized by cup-marks and cup-and-rings. The discovery also reinforces the special character of Kilmartin Glen as one of the most original and remarkable Neolithic–Bronze Age landscapes of monumentality and rock art in Britain. This article describes the process of authenticating the Dunchraigaig carvings as part of the Scotland's Rock Art Project (ScRAP) and discusses their implications for our understanding of prehistoric rock art in Scotland, Britain and Atlantic Europe more widely.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that no alterations are made and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use and/or adaptation of the article.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Figure 0

Figure 1. Deer carving alongside cup-and-rings at Laxe de Os Carballos (Pontevedra, Galicia). (Photograph: Joana Valdez-Tullett.)

Figure 1

Table 1. Rock art traditions in Europe.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Plan of cist cover decorated with carvings of axeheads in Nether Largie North. (Plan by RCAHMS, Crown Copyright: © HES)

Figure 3

Figure 3. Other deer carvings from Britain: (a) 3D model of Glen Domhain boulder, Argyll (ScRAP); (b) Cissbury Mines, Sussex (Teather 2015); (c) Eggerness Stag, Dumfries and Galloway (photograph: Joana Valdez-Tullett).

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Figure 4. Other deer carvings from Britain: (a) Cronk yn How Stone, Isle of Man (after Darvill et al.2005); (b) Ballochmyle rock face, Ayrshire (after Stevenson 1994); (c); Goatscrag rock-shelter, Northumberland (after van Hoek & Smith 1988).

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Figure 5. Kilmartin Glen and Dunchraigaig Cairn in the context of Britain and Ireland. (Map: Linda Bjerketvedt.)

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Figure 6. Aerial photograph of Dunchraigaig Cairn. (Crown Copyright: © Historic Environment Scotland.)

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Figure 7. Plan of Dunchraigaig Cairn, showing location of the large cist to the southeast and the central short cist. The third cist was not visible at the time the drawing was produced, and therefore does not feature the plan. (RCAHMS; Crown Copyright: © Historic Environment Scotland.)

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Figure 8. Dunchraigaig Cairn and eastern entrance to the large cist. (Photograph: Joana Valdez-Tullett.)

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Figure 9. The large cist capstone at of Dunchraigaig Cairn, with drawings and interpretation of the animal carvings. (Photogrammetry and drawing: Guillaume Robin.)

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Figure 10. Rendering of the high-resolution 3D model of the Dunchraigaig capstone with LiDAR tools. Details of the of the juvenile deer (a) and the stags (b) on the right. (3D Model: © Historic Environment Scotland. Rendering: Łukasz Banaszek.)

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Figure 11. Details of the Dunchraigaig carvings: (left) grey-scale PCV image of the Fabulous Stag(s); (right) distance mapping of the juvenile deer. (3D Model: © Historic Environment Scotland. Rendering: Tom Goskar.)

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Figure 12. Detail of the Fabulous Stag at Dunchraigaig. (Crown Copyright: © Historic Environment Scotland.)

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Figure 13. Detail of the Fabulous Stag's high-resolution 3D model, rendered with a localized light source and grey depth colouring, clearly showing the peckmarks. (3D Model: © Historic Environment Scotland. Rendering: Tom Goskar.)

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Figure 14. Detail of a juvenile deer at Dunchraigaig, showing the accentuated weathering, shallow grooves and cupmarks potentially marking its sex. (Photograph: Joana Valdez-Tullett.)

Figure 15

Figure 15. High magnification of a decayed mineral through chemical dissolution and leaching of iron from within the rock matrix of Dunchraigaig capstone. (Photograph: Callum Graham.)

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Figure 16. Photograph dating to the nineteenth/early twentieth century, showing the capstone in place. (Crown Copyright: © Historic Environment Scotland.)

Figure 17

Figure 17. (Left) Painted Levantine deer from La Tenalla (Pobla de Benifassà, Castelló, Spain) (photograph: Inés Domingo-Sanz); (right) [This image has been removed due to copyright restrictions.]

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Figure 18. Painted deer-hunting scene from Orca dos Juncais Passage Grave (Viseu, Portugal) (after Shee Twohig 1981).