Boathouse used as a store by the mail boat's crew.
Foula
"It is similar in construction to others of the late Neolithic or early Bronze age. The actual date of the construction has yet to be established, though one shard of pottery has been found buried under 60cm of peat on the floor of the enclosure. That should help to provide evidence of a date when the site was in use."
Will it? One chard and that 60 cm under peat.
Foula has many stone enclosures along its craggy coastline.
Foula - The Edge of the World:
Boat Noosts
These are hollows dug out in the shape a Shetland fourern (four oared boat) to shelter the boats from strong winds. The boats were also tied down fore and aft to large boulders.
Ham Ayre (beach). Three fourerns being pulled from their noosts with two others still in their noosts. Boathouse in the upper right.
Two noosts at Da Riggs more than half eroded away by the sea.
Boat noost at da Riggs
Personally, if I was studying archaeology there and found any stone enclosure along the coast, my first thought would not be "
a stone circle, a henge!" - instead, it would be "
another boat noost" and I would stick with that until certain otherwise, and the odd shard would not dissuade me. No matter my hopes, I would not start boasting about a Bronze Age stone circle.
Solomon