As the glaciers of the last Ice Age receded, humans ventured into the far north, exploring a wild, fertile territory. Nomadic hunter-gatherers at first, they made the decision to stay for good – to farm and to build. The landscapes they lived on were remarkable in their diversity. Vast forests of pine and birch ran through one of the world's oldest mountain ranges – once as high as the Himalayas but over millennia scoured and compressed by sheets of ice a mile thick. On hundreds of islands around a saw-edged coastline, communities flourished, linked to each other and the wider world by the sea, the transport superhighway of ancient times. It was a place of challenges and opportunity. A place we know today as Scotland.
Over the past 10,000 years, every inch of Scotland – whether remote hilltop, fertile floodplain, or storm-lashed coastline – has been shaped, changed and moulded by its people. No part of the land is without its human story. From Orkney's immaculately preserved Neolithic villages to Highland glens stripped of nineteenth century settlements, from a Skye peninsula converted to an ingenious Viking shipyard, to a Hebridean clifftop used as the site of a spectacular lighthouse, Scotland's history is written into the land in vivid detail.
Scotland's Landscapes'tells the enduring story of this interaction between man and his environment. The third book in a series showcasing Scotland's National Collection of Aerial Photography, stunning new imagery builds up a picture of a dramatic terrain forged by thousands of years of incredible change. Divided into four chapters that capture the essence and uniqueness of Scotland: Highlands, Islands, Lowlands and Coastlines, these are the nation's landscapes as you have never seen or understood them before.
James Crawford is Communications Manager for the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), and has worked as a journalist, editor and literary agent. He has previously co-authored Above Scotland, Above Scotland - Cities, Victorian Scotland and Aerofilms: A History of Britain from Above.