Visitors at the British Museum’s ‘The World of Stonehenge’ exhibition on Saturday. (📷 Jo Bourne)
Jo Bourne is a London-based supervisor and photographer at the Ness of Brodgar. In 2013… Read more
Guests at the launch of the British Museum’s World of Stonehenge exhibition view the Ness of Brodgar display. (📷 Antonia Thomas)
By Dr Antonia ThomasUHI Archaeology Institute
Tuesday, February 16,… Read more
Until the early years of the 21st century, the two buildings at the Knap of Howar had the distinction of being the earliest evidence of Neolithic settlement in Orkney. Read more
To mark the opening of The World of Stonehenge at the British Museum today, British Archaeology magazine has made an article on the exhibition free to access until February 28,… Read more
Wild day. Calm day. And then another wild day…
That seems to have been the picture for 2022 so far. But intrepid site director Nick has been out and about… Read more
A few Ness-related links among the many relating to the Burton Agnes “drum” and The World of Stonehenge exhibition at the British Museum.
โEvery year it astounds usโ: the Orkney… Read more
A new Orkney.com article, by Dave Flanagan, on the Ness’ involvement in the World of Stonehenge exhibition at the British Museum in London.
Click here to view.… Read more
Red deer skull excavated at the Bay of Skaill, Orkney, in 2021. The skull and antler (the second antler had been recovered by a member of the public previously) lay… Read more
With just over a fortnight until the opening of the British Museum’s World of Stonehenge exhibition, here’s a few links you might find interesting:
The world of Stonehenge: placing a… Read more
Despite the atrocious stormy weather over the weekend, site director Nick Card ventured out and along the lochsides. So here’s this week’s photographic offering showing some equally tenacious birds also… Read more
This week’s photographs from site director Nick Card, focusing on one of his neighbours encountered on Sunday by the shore of the Harray loch.
… Read more
Like the many Neolithic chambered cairns throughout Orkney, the Sandfiold cist was clearly meant to be, and was, re-used. Few Orcadian cairns have been found to contain human remains, strongly suggesting that they were not the final destination for all the Neolithic dead. Read more