Rare surviving piece of Scottish Iron Age textile goes on public display
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Rare surviving piece of Scottish Iron Age textile goes on public display
A fine piece of woven fabric lay buried in the bottom of Loch Tay in Perthshire for nearly 2,500 years, naturally preserved by the silty bed. Believed to be one of the oldest of its kind in Britain and dating back to the early to middle part of the Iron Age, it was found in 1979 when an Iron Age loch dwelling house, known as the Oakbank Crannog, was excavated on Loch Tay. Now, the public will be able to see this ancient textile close-up when it …
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