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About 2200 BC, new knowledge came to Grampian from the Netherlands: that of metal-working and the production of items in copper and bronze. The metal-workers used a highly decorated form of pottery, beakers, which were imitated when burials in short cists (kists or chests - stone lined) were made.

 
Loanhead of Daviot
The Bronze Age in Grampian is characterised by the wealth of monuments such as a variety of cairns, as well as standing stones and the mysterious stone circles. (Grampian contains about 10% of the stone circles in the UK, including its own characteristic type: the recumbent stone circle.)
Easter Aquhorthies
 
 
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