Beaker pottery
The Achavanich site in Caithness, Scotland, is significant for the well-preserved Beaker pottery and unique crouched burial of a young woman named “Ava,” dating back to around 2300-2200 BCE. The pottery is characteristic of Beaker culture, with a bell-shaped profile and intricate geometric patterns. Ava’s burial, distinguished by her unusual position and the accompanying artefacts like a barbed and tanged arrowhead, provides critical insights into the cultural and burial practices of the Beaker people. Further, genetic analyses and forensic reconstructions of Ava have offered a glimpse into the physical attributes and lifestyles of the Beaker people in Early Bronze Age Scotland, suggesting traits like dark hair and eyes and a likely prevalence of lactose intolerance.
Beaker pottery is also found in North Mains, Strathallan, dating to around 2200 BCE–2100 BCE, and Forteviot, Perthshire, approximately dating to 2200 BCE–2000 BCE
This event is also available in the following timelines: