
A plan to recreate an Iron Age broch in Caithness has moved a step forward after the scheme was granted planning permission.
Brochs – tall, double-walled drystone towers – have only ever been found in Scotland.
Ruins of the fortified houses survive in parts of the Highlands, Western Isles, Orkney and Shetland.
The Caithness Broch Project's tower is proposed for a site near Latheron, south of Wick and would be the first to be constructed in 2,000 years.
In August, the Flow Country Partnership and University of the Highlands and Islands' North, West and Hebrides division joined the project.
One idea they are developing is to make the broch the official eastern gateway to the Flow Country Unesco World Heritage Site, a large area of protected blanket bog.
by willfiresoon
2 comments
“No one has ever done it before”
Well maybe not in living memory!
What an absolute waste of money.
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