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Skara Brae
Amazing and mysterious Neolithic settlement on Scotland's Orkney Islands.Skara Brae is the ruins of a Neolithic settlement (3100-2500 BC), located on the Bay of Skaill on the west coast of Mainland Orkney, Scotland.
Skara Brae's inhabitants are thought to have been makers and users of "grooved ware," a distinctive pottery style developed in northern Scotland not long before the establishment of the settlement.
Skara Brae consists of ten clustered houses built of flat stones stacked within earthen dams, without mortar. Given the number of homes in the community, it seems likely that no more than fifty people lived in Skara Brae at any given time.
The dwellings contain a number of stone-built pieces of furniture, including cupboards, dressers, seats, and storage boxes. A number of enigmatic carved stone artifacts have been found at the site. The purpose of these remains debated among scholars.
Skara Brae is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Read more about Skara Brae on Atlas Obscura...
Category: Lost Tribes, Architectural Oddities, Long Now Locations, Incredible Ruins, Subterranean Sites
Location: Sandwick, United Kingdom
Edited by: Annetta, wythe, Dylan, The Frowning Duck, Rachel