Hardback book `Argyll Volume 3: Mull, Tiree, Coll & Northern Argyll`.
An inventory of the monuments of Mull, Tiree, Coll & Northern Argyll.
Hardback book `Argyll Volume 3: Mull, Tiree, Coll & Northern Argyll`.
An inventory of the monuments of Mull, Tiree, Coll & Northern Argyll.
Dr Euan MacKie , archaeologist and leader of the excavation of the broch at Vaul, giving a talk there in July 2000.
Dr MacKie excavated Dun Mor Vaul in the 1960s. The broch measures 9.2 m in internal diameter with dry-stone walls up to 4.5 m thick and once probably 8 m high. Built around the middle of the 1st century AD, the absence of a permanent central hearth suggests it was used originally as a temporary refuge. The upper storeys of the broch were subsequently dismantled and a round-house, possibly an aisled wheel-house, constructed in the interior. It housed a flourishing community engaged in mixed farming, iron-working and bronze-casting. A number of worked bone, pottery, metal and worked stone artefacts were discovered during excavation and are now held in the Hunterian Museum in Glasgow. Radiocarbon dating of organic material indicates that the site was inhabited from the late 6th or 5th century BC to the 2nd or 3rd century AD, though perhaps not continuously.
Hardback book `Coll and Tiree` by Erskine Beveridge, re-printed in 2000.
Account of the history of Coll, Tiree and the Treshnish Isles from research undertaken in at the end of the 19th century into domestic, pre-Christian and Christian sites and the artefacts and other remains found in them.
Paperback book `Dun Mor Vaul` by Dr Euan W. Mackie.
Account of the excavation of the broch at Vaul by Dr Euan Mackie in 1962-1964.
Paperback book `Brochs of Scotland` by J. N. G. Ritchie.
Description of some of the Iron Age brochs of Scotland.
De-accessioned 21.3.2026.