Sanday
History & Wildlife
The name of Sanday means "sand
island", which is appropriate as one of its most outstanding
features are the sweeping bays with their dazzling white sandy
beaches just like those found in the Caribbean.
Sanday is the largest of the North
Isles of Orkney and is approxinately 16 miles (26km) in length,
with a population of around 500. The island is both a haven for
wildlife and contains a number of important archaeological
sites.
Around
4,000 BC, farmers were settling on Sanday. The island offered
the best conditions in Orkney for arable farming, reflected in
the extraordinary diversity of prehistoric, Viking Age and
later settlements. This wealth is indicated by Mediaeval
taxation rolls which valued Sanday land higher than elsewhere
in Orkney. Rich farmsteads usually remained in occupation for
thousand of years, resulting in massive accumulations of
successively deserted buildings and midden deposits, giving
archaeological stratigraphies many metres
thick.
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On
the Elsness Peninsula, you'll find one of
the most spectacular chambered cairns
found in the Orkneys:
The Quoyness Chambered
Tomb. The tomb and its principal chamber date
from around 2900 B.C., reaching a height of
some 13 feet (4m).
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The island has a number of other
important sites, including the Tofts Ness funerary complex. The
complex is considered one of the most important prehistoric
sites in Britain, comprising of some 500 prehistoric burial
mounds, representing thousands of years of mans
development.
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In 1991 a spectacular
Viking-Age find was made near Scar in Burness.
This boat burial contained threehuman skeletons
richly endowed with ornaments, household goods
and weapons. Such an ostentatious funeral could
only have been staged by a family of enormous
wealth.
Intriguingly Sanday
folklore speaks of a fantastically rich
individual once having lived at
Scar.
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Wildlife on
Sanday
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The
coastline of the island gives easy access
to one of Sanday's principal wildlife
attractions - seals.
Common Seal pups can be seen
swimming at Otterswick in June and Grey seals
are born on secluded beaches in
November.
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Another
delight of the beaches are the shells - the Cowrie (Grottie
Buckie) and the Faroese Sunset being two favourites.
More elusive are Sanday's otters
but the alert will find their tell-tale tracks -five toes and a
trailing tail in the sand. Sanday boasts all the seabirds,
terns and waders found elsewhere in Orkney. Vagrant birds such
as Hoopoe, Red-Breasted Flycatcher, Ortolan and Little and Pine
Buntings have all been seen in recent
summers.
As an
owner of one of our land plots, you will be making a direct
contribution to the preservation of this rich natural and
archaeological heritage.
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