The 2,000-year-old leather footwear was discovered along with Roman jewelry, coins, pottery, and animal bones at the site, which is located at the northern frontier of the Roman Empire.
The cache of Roman shoes and sandals—one of the largest ever found in Scotland—was uncovered recently in a ditch at the gateway to a second century A.D. fort built along the Antonine Wall. The wall is a massive defensive barrier that the Romans built across central Scotland during their brief occupation of the region.
In what will most likely prove to be a garbage dump, archaeologists are finding clues to life in one of the "most important Scottish excavations in the last decade." Link
(Image credit: Martin Cook)
Bah!
Obviously written by an Englishman.
Alright, you guys!!! I just waxed this floor, so take your freakin' shoes off before you come in here and track mud all over the place.
It was just that "most important Scottish" and "garbage dump" being used in the same sentence.