- cross-posted to:
- scotland
- bbc@rss.ponder.cat
- cross-posted to:
- scotland
- bbc@rss.ponder.cat
A hoard of Bronze Age artefacts unearthed by a metal detectorist in the Borders has been saved for the nation by National Museums Scotland.
It has acquired the Peebles Hoard, which had lain undisturbed for 3,000 years before it was discovered in 2020.
Efforts have now started to secure funding for continued research and conservation of the collection, which includes more than 500 pieces.
National Museums Scotland (NMS) said the man who found it had received a five-figure sum.
Senior curator Dr Matthew Knight said it shed new light on Bronze Age communities in Scotland.
The hoard has been described as one of the most significant ever found in the country.
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NMS said it represented a “complex set of material, some of which has no archaeological parallel anywhere in western Europe”.
“This includes many unique artefacts, the use of which is yet to be discovered and could transform our understanding of life in Bronze Age Scotland,” it added.
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The hoard was found in 2020 by metal-detectorist Mariusz Stepien, who alerted the Treasure Trove Unit.
That allowed experts to coordinate a complex retrieval process which involved removing the hoard from the ground in a single block which was then CT scanned.