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Cause of Crannog Centre fire on Loch Tay 'may never be known' By Alison Campsie. Comment. Published 3rd Aug 2021, 16:45 BST. Updated 10th Aug 2021, 16:24 BST.
A recreated Iron Age house on the shores of Loch Tay has been destroyed in a fire. The Scottish Crannog Centre, which is also a museum of life in ancient Scotland, was hit by the devastating blaze ...
A Perthshire tourist attraction, devastated by fire in June, has been given £51,000 towards its recovery. The Iron Age roundhouse, which is part of the Scottish Crannog Centre on Loch Tay, burned ...
A “devastating” fire has destroyed a recreated Iron Age roundhouse on the shores of a lake in Scotland. The Scottish Crannog Centre, which houses a museum of ancient life, burned down on ...
A FIVE-STAR Perthshire tourist attraction has been left destroyed by a fire that happened last night. The Scottish Crannog Centre near Kenmore was gutted by a blaze at around 11pm. The fire b… ...
Kind-hearted people have pledged around £64,000 to help rebuild the Scottish Crannog Centre in Kenmore, Perthshire. Pictures of the fire that wrecked the Iron Age living history museum’s ...
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Rare Iron Age textile to go on display for first time - MSNThe textile, believed to be the oldest of its kind, was originally discovered in 1979 when an Iron Age dwelling house, known as The Oakbank Crannog, was excavated on Loch Tay.
PART of Clare’s crannóg site, which has featured on Irish school curriculums for decades, has been destroyed in a fire.
The boss of the Scottish Crannog Centre on Loch Tay said the cause of the fire that destroyed the replica Iron Age house that stood on the water may never be known given the intensity of the blaze.
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