The Scotsman

Whale remains found below tram route

● Archaeolog­ists made Leith discovery between a post office and a scrap yard

- By BRIAN FERGUSON

Archaeolog­ists have been left baffled by the discovery of the remains of a whale during an excavation on the route of Edinburgh’s tram extension which may also have uncovered new evidence of the city’s centuries-old “defences”.

Two large bones from the fin of a large male sperm whale were found buried beneath the ground between a post office and a scrap yard on Constituti­on Street in Leith.

It is thought they may have been brought back to Leith as a memento or “trophy” from one of the many whaling expedition­s which left the port bound for Arctic and Atlantic waters between 1616 and 1963.

However, it is believed they could be from a whale as much as 800 years old. Carbon dating tests are to be carried out to determine whether the bones may date back to the medieval era, when Leith’s first settlement­s date from.

The bones, which were identified by experts at the National Museum of Scotland, were found during a four-month dig along stretches of Constituti­on Street, which had to be brought to a halt along with all the tramworks on the route, at the end of March, due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Investigat­ions are resuming this month, to coincide with the restart of the tramworks.

Other key discoverie­s included remains of a large stone wall, found beneath the junction of Bernard Street and Constituti­on Street, where a statue of Robert Burns has been temporaril­y removed to accommodat­e the tramworks. It may have been part of a previously unknown seawall built as part of the fortificat­ion of Leith in the 16th and 17th centuries.

A small iron cannonball recovered from the route of the tram is believed to date from the 17th century, when Leith was under the control of Oliver Cromwell’s forces.

John Lawson, Edinburgh council’s archaeolog­ist, said: “The discovery of the whale bones was really unusual and expected. It’s a real mystery how they have ended up there.

“Leith was really important for its whaling industry from the early 17th century to the 20th century, but it would have been happening in the North Sea and North Atlantic as far back as medieval times.

“Another question is whether they could have been brought to Leith as some kind of memento or trophy, but they’re from the fin, which would be a very strange part of a whale to keep.

“They’re very heavy, they’re almost like picking up a stone. They’re a very odd thing to find in an archaeolog­ical dig.

“They could have been brought for some reasons back from the Atlantic to Leith or could be from a whale that just beached on the shore, has been cut up and then had its bones dumped.

“It will be really interestin­g to date the bones, which may tell us something about the 20th century whaling industry or whaling as far back as 800 years ago.

Bob Will, senior project manager at Guard Archaeolog­y, which is working on the tram route, said: “The project is allowing us to discover more about the history and developmen­t of Leith, from the medieval period to the modern day.”

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