Radwick Bay,Hoy: Archaeological Site
Bay of Radwick, perched on the rugged coast of Hoy in the Orkney archipelago, dates to the late Neolithic, around three thousand years before our era.
Towering basalt columns rise from the tempest-tossed sea, their jointed façades carved by relentless salt-sprayed winds and the grinding power of centuries-old tides; the surrounding dunes, sculpted by storm-driven sands, record the shifting shorelines of millennia.

Scholars view the site as a ceremonial waypoint where ancient mariners left offerings to sea deities, and its stratified layers provide a natural archive for reconstructing prehistoric sea-level changes, linking mythic navigation with modern scientific insight.
The cliffs breathe like the ribs of a slumbering leviathan, and each weathered stone sings of hands that once etched prayers into stone, a haunting duet of human devotion and the untamed roar of the ocean.
Time folds upon itself, preserving these relics in a paradox of decay and permanence, so that even as the world rushes forward, the Bay of Radwick remains a ghostly beacon, inviting modern eyes to linger in its melancholy glow.
✓ max
Bay of Radwick, perched on the rugged coast of Hoy in the Orkney archipelago, dates to the late Neolithic, around three thousand years before our era. Towering…