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Daily Record
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Perthshire Advertiser

3000-year-old Bronze Age logboat to feature in Perth’s new City Hall museum display

A 3000-year-old Bronze Age logboat is having conservation work done so it can feature in Perth’s new museum display.

Culture Perth and Kinross have announced that one of the star historic objects from the collection is set to undergo further conservation treatment before going on display in the new museum being created in the former Perth City Hall.

The Carpow logboat, one of the oldest and best-preserved of its kind in Scotland, was carved out from one single tree trunk and has been radiocarbon-dated to around 1000 BCE.

It will once again visit the National Museums Scotland Centre for conservation and analytical research in Granton, where it underwent initial conservation work for six years after being painstakingly excavated from the River Tay at Carpow in the summer of 2006.

As part of the original conservation in 2006, the logboat had to be cut into three sections, carefully packed, and crane loaded onto a lorry for transport to Edinburgh. It has been on display in Perth Museum and Art Gallery since 2017.

The forthcoming treatment is anticipated to be carried out over three weeks, after which the logboat will be stored at Granton until installed in the new museum.

Anna Zwagerman, conservation officer at Culture Perth and Kinross, said: “We really look forward to seeing the boat returned closer to its original shape and properly supported, so future generations can marvel at this Bronze Age wonder for years to come.”

An artist's impression of the new visual arts museum at the redeveloped Perth City Hall (Culture Perth and Kinross)

During this next phase of conservation, the logboat will undergo reshaping work and crack repairs.

In the dry museum environment, away from water, the Carpow Logboat has slowly become flatter and less boat-shaped, with balsawood fillings from the original treatment falling out.

This new conservation treatment will aim to return the boat to its original shape as much as possible and provide a supportive mount to reduce future recurrence of this problem.

The logboat, one of the most exciting archaeological discoveries made in Tayside this century, was first officially reported in 2001 by metal detectorists exploring the mudflats at Carpow during a summer of exceptionally low river levels.

An archaeological assessment, led by Perth and Kinross Heritage Trust, established that the protruding wood was a 9m/30ft long logboat.

When the logboat returns to public display in the new museum in 2024, it will encourage visitors to explore the importance of the River Tay in everyday and ceremonial life, sitting alongside some of the Bronze Age swords and other metalwork that has been recovered from the Tay.

The new museum for Perth and Kinross will open in Spring 2024. Before this the Carpow logboat will return from its latest journey and take up a position where it can be widely admired.

Mark Hall, collections officer with Culture Perth and Kinross, who has been working with the boat since its discovery, explained: “It is a very exciting prospect to think of the boat undergoing further conservation so that it looks its best when it returns to Perth and is able again to share with visitors its rich insights into how people have lived with the River Tay.”

The new Museum being developed at Perth City Hall will be managed in partnership between Perth and Kinross Council and Culture Perth and Kinross and is supported by £10 million from the UK Government as part of the Tay Cities Region Deal.

The unique Carpow logboat remains on display at Perth Museum and Art Gallery until August 23.

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