In several rural areas of Scotland, an old tradition has existed for centuries: when the level of some lakes drops after periods of drought or storms, strange rows of stones and dark woods sometimes appear briefly, which the residents call “the footprints of the ancients.” For a long time they were thought to be simple natural remains… until archaeologists discovered that many actually belonged to human constructions hidden underwater for thousands of years.
The artificial island hidden under the waters of Scotland. At the beginning of May something unusual happened in Scotland: a small artificial island reappeared, built more than five thousand years ago with wood, branches and stone, even before Stonehenge. What today seems like just a rocky islet lost in a lake on the Isle of Lewis hid underwater a complex human structure built during the Neolithic, a time when British communities were still taking their first steps towards large collective projects.
The discovery not only forces us to reconsider the antiquity of the so-called Scottish “crannogs”, but also the organizational capacity of societies that were already capable of completely transforming an aquatic landscape thousands of years before the most famous large megalithic constructions in Europe.
A wooden platform from before the pyramids. Archaeologists apparently discovered that the Loch Bhorgastail islet originally began as a huge circular wooden platform about 23 meters in diameter covered with layers of branches and vegetation. As the centuries passed, different generations expanded and reinforced the structure by adding new layers of stone and brushwood until transforming it into the small island visible today.
The dating places the first phase of construction between 3800 and 3300 BC, that is, several centuries before the best-known phases of Stonehenge and long before the Egyptian pyramids. The research also shows that those Neolithic communities not only built funerary monuments or stone circles, but were also capable of modifying entire lakes to build artificial spaces isolated from the continent.

The wooden platform of the crannog, below the waterline
Under the water a lost stone path appeared. One of the most striking discoveries was the location of a submerged stone causeway that connected the island to the lake shore. Today it remains hidden underwater, but in the past it provided easy access to the artificial platform before lake levels and the natural environment changed.
Researchers believe that this access demonstrates that the island was not a simple symbolic structure lost in the middle of the water, but a place regularly used by entire communities. The fact that the construction was modified and reused for thousands of years (from the Neolithic to the Iron Age) further indicates that the place maintained special importance for entire generations.

Fragments of a Neolithic pot found near the crannog
Remains of banquets and meetings. Not only that. Hundreds of Neolithic ceramic fragments belonging to bowls and vessels appeared around the island, many of them still retaining remains of food adhered to the interior surfaces. Archaeologists believe that this points to community activities related to meetings, food preparation and possible ritual banquets.
The enormous amount of work required to build an artificial island in the middle of a lake also suggests the existence of societies much more organized than normally imagined for that time. They were not small improvised groups surviving in isolation, but communities capable of coordinating labor, resources and planning over long periods of time.

Aerial view of the Loch Bhorgastail crannog, illustrating the site context and the land-water interface where integrated terrestrial and underwater survey methods are applied
Another way to explore the past underwater. Much of the progress has been possible thanks to a new technique developed specifically to study areas of very shallow water, an especially problematic environment for archeology because terrestrial and underwater methods often fail precisely in that intermediate zone.
The researchers combined drones, waterproof cameras and stereophotogrammetry systems capable of generating continuous three-dimensional models both above and below water. The result has made it possible to digitally reconstruct the entire island and document structures invisible from the surface with centimeter precision. Until now, many of these environments were considered a kind of “blind zone” for archaeology.
Scotland could hide hundreds. The Loch Bhorgastail case is especially important because researchers believe there are hundreds of crannogs spread across Scottish lochs and many could hide much older origins than previously thought.
For decades it was believed that most belonged to the Iron Age or medieval times, but recent discoveries are pushing their origins back thousands of years, to the Neolithic. This opens the possibility that more artificial platforms, submerged paths and remains of human activities at a surprisingly early time in European history remain hidden beneath the calm waters of many Scottish lochs.
The island changes the image of British Neolithic societies. The most fascinating thing about the discovery is that it forces us to abandon the simplified image of Neolithic communities as dispersed and technically limited groups. Building an artificial island of wood and stone in the middle of a lake required planning, knowledge of the aquatic environment, transportation of materials, and large-scale social cooperation.
And all this was happening in Scotland more than five thousand years ago, even before some of the most famous prehistoric monuments on the planet were built. Under the dark waters of a seemingly normal lake, extraordinary proof has emerged of the extent to which those ancient societies were much more complex and ambitious than previously believed.
Imagen | University of Southampton
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