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AR01055_EMAP_Gazetteer_of_Sites_4-2_10.pdf - The Heritage ...

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Kerry<br />

House 9 was located at the southwest side <strong>of</strong> the excavated area and was truncated by a<br />

small enclosure scarped into the hillside at its southern extent. Its internal dimensions were<br />

approximately 4.6m by 5m, and a doorway was located in the eastern wall flanked by large<br />

horizontally laid blocks. Its walls, which survived to a maximum <strong>of</strong> 1.1m thick and 0.7m high,<br />

were built exclusively <strong>of</strong> horizontally-laid masonry. No laid floor survived and the interior was<br />

heavily disturbed by later cultivation. A possible drainage channel defined by a gully (1m-<br />

1.4m wide) was uncovered to the west <strong>of</strong> the house.<br />

<strong>The</strong> much disturbed basal remains <strong>of</strong> a possible corn-drying kiln were excavated within the<br />

large polygonal enclosure, approximately 15m to the north <strong>of</strong> the cluster <strong>of</strong> houses. It<br />

consisted <strong>of</strong> a rectangular block <strong>of</strong> masonry containing a circular chamber (1m diameter) at<br />

its west side and a rectangular stone-lined passage at the southern end. <strong>The</strong> kiln overlay one<br />

<strong>of</strong> two excavated drains which would have kept the area <strong>of</strong> the possible drying chamber dry.<br />

Charcoal from one <strong>of</strong> the drain produced a radiocarbon date <strong>of</strong> A.D. 934 ± 110. Charcoal<br />

from the excavated kiln yielded a two sigma radiocarbon date <strong>of</strong> A.D. 710-740 or 770-1220.<br />

Three cultivation furrows aligned north-south cut into the kiln. <strong>The</strong> excavated structure<br />

compared closely in plan and dimensions with a better preserved kiln at the southern extent<br />

<strong>of</strong> the western settlement<br />

House 10 was 11 were revealed during excavations in 1999. <strong>The</strong>y were poorly preserved<br />

circular structures (Hayden 1999:324).<br />

A circular house (IV) (3.5m in internal diameter) was excavated to the west <strong>of</strong> the cluster <strong>of</strong><br />

houses (1-9) on sloping ground close to an area <strong>of</strong> marshy ground. Like Houses 1 and 4, its<br />

walls were constructed by two lines <strong>of</strong> vertically-set stones set in trenches which originally<br />

retained a mass <strong>of</strong> sod and stone. A paved pathway led to the door <strong>of</strong> the house at its southeastern<br />

side. To the north (uphill) and east side <strong>of</strong> the house were a number <strong>of</strong> unlined<br />

drains which diverted water downslope around the building. A series <strong>of</strong> internal features and<br />

occupation deposits were excavated. A stone-capped drain extended from a pit in the centre<br />

<strong>of</strong> the house to its wall trench. Associated with the pit were a posthole and a number <strong>of</strong> small<br />

stakeholes. Charcoal from the base <strong>of</strong> a stone-lined hearth in a later occupation deposit<br />

produced a two sigma radiocarbon date <strong>of</strong> A.D. 676-984. From the house included two flat<br />

stone discs, broken whetstone and a fragment <strong>of</strong> a carbonized wooden vessel.<br />

<strong>The</strong> remains <strong>of</strong> another large, early medieval, stone circular house with a souterrain were<br />

uncovered 100m west <strong>of</strong> the early medieval complex <strong>of</strong> houses. <strong>The</strong> circular house was<br />

replaced by a sub-rectangular, bow-sided building. <strong>The</strong> walls <strong>of</strong> the latter consisted <strong>of</strong><br />

regularly spaced large posts. It was suggested that the shape and construction <strong>of</strong> this house<br />

indicated a possible Scandinavian origin. <strong>The</strong> building was in turn overlain by the truncated<br />

remains <strong>of</strong> a medieval, rectangular, stone-walled house (Hayden 2000:0423).<br />

A medieval (i.e. eleventh/fifteenth century-) agricultural landscape <strong>of</strong> broad ridges and<br />

furrows (up to 4.0m wide) was uncovered to the east <strong>of</strong> a possible medieval drainage<br />

channel along the southern slopes (Fig. 164). <strong>The</strong> broad ridge and furrows were contained<br />

within eleven fields defined by large earthen and stone banks and all had developed lynchets<br />

varying from 1.3m to 2.0m at their lower ends. No medieval farmstead could be definitely<br />

associated with the broad ridge and furrows.<br />

Two stone and earthen field banks (Fig. 165) were recorded to the south and southeast <strong>of</strong><br />

the house cluster (1-11) and were built from a level under or within an old plough soil. <strong>The</strong><br />

south-eastern field boundary formed the fourth side <strong>of</strong> the polygonal enclosure (A)<br />

surrounding the house cluster 1-9. Part <strong>of</strong> a quernstone and stone socket was recovered from<br />

the southern bank. <strong>The</strong> fields delimited by these banks contained broad ridge and furrows<br />

which cut through and overlay the early medieval houses and corn-drying kiln. Charcoal from<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the furrows overlying the corn-drying kiln yielded a two sigma radiocarbon date <strong>of</strong><br />

A.D. 1292-1324 or A.D. 1332-1396. A series <strong>of</strong> other trenches were also excavated in various<br />

other fields on the southern slopes.<br />

335

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