An Animate Landscape: Rock Art and the Prehistory of Kilmartin, Argyll, Scotland

by Andrew Meirion Jones, Andrew Jones, Davina Freedman, Blaze O'Connor, and Hugo Lamdin-Whymark

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Book cover for An Animate Landscape

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The Kilmartin landscape in western Scotland is widely regarded as Scotland's richest prehistoric landscape. It contains a number of barrow cemeteries, stone alignments, stone circles and a henge. With over 250 individual rock art sites, it also has the greatest concentration of prehistoric rock art in the British Isles and some of the most impressive rock art sites. An Animate Landscape contains the results of a major research project that included excavations of two sites, Torbhlaren and Ormaig, and the analysis of radiocarbon dates to produce a more coherent chronological context, as well as taking a broader interpretative approach to the landscape. The book argues that the rock art is an active part of the process of socialising the landscape, in which the landscape became more organised from the Late Neolithic onwards, and that this organised landscape relates to broader cosmological concerns. The book is richly illustrated with colour drawings and photographs done by a series of artists to produce a unique visual record of the rock art and its place in the landscape, alongside more traditional archaeological enquiry.
  • ISBN10 1905119720
  • ISBN13 9781905119721
  • Publish Date 15 December 2011 (first published 1 January 2011)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Windgather Press
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 400
  • Language English