Reports & Resources Archive
Browse the Reports and Resources Archive below or filter by category / topic.
Category
- Balmaclellan 2
- Can You Dig It? 9
- Community Action Plan (CAP) 20
- Dumfries and Galloway Council 1
- Dumfries and Galloway wide 1
- Galloway Glens Landscape Partnership (GGLP) 34
- Glenkens Community & Arts Trust (GCAT) 2
- Landscape Conservation Action Plan (LCAP) 3
- Loch Ken Trust (LKT) 1
- National Trust For Scotland 1
- New Galloway 1
- Other projects 1
- Parton Kirk 1
- Studies Commissioned by GGLP 13
Topic
- Biosphere 2
- CAP Addendum 1
- CAP Theme 1 3
- CAP Theme 2 2
- CAP Theme 3 12
- CAP Theme 4 3
- Scottish languages 2
- access 1
- annual report 1
- archaeology 5
- assets 2
- biodiversity 1
- business 2
- carbon neutral 3
- children 4
- communication 2
- connectivity 3
- covenanters 1
- covid 1
- education 5
- engagement 5
- farming 1
- feasibility studies 1
- fish 4
- flooding 1
- food 1
- funders 1
- health 1
- heritage 11
- housing 4
- invasive species 2
- land use 6
- landscape 4
- overview 2
- resilience 1
- skills & training 4
- tourism 2
- transport 1
- update 1
- workshops 2
MyGalloway CANMORE Sites
MyGalloway was an exciting project to improve our national historical records and you didn’t even have to leave the house!
Nuhin new unner the sun
In 2021, the ‘Dig It!’ project commissioned Mae Diansangu to write a poem inspired by the investigation of a deserted farmstead called Upper Gairloch on the Raiders Road.
Are We There Yet?
Milestones have been around since Roman times, but their heyday really began in the 1700s. They were designed not only to inform travellers of directions and distances, but to help coaches keep to schedule. At the height of their era, there were 20,000 miles of roads with milestones across Britain.
Training Workshop Notes - Community Archaeology Project
A set of Technical Notes from community archaeology skills training workshops.
Barhill Woods, Kirkcudbright: Historic Woodland Assessment
The project assessed the evidence for the history of Barhill Wood, identifying that woodland existed there in the late medieval period, with a subsequent period of woodland absence, before tree cover was reintroduced as part of estate-wide plantations in the late 18th century.
Technical Notes - Community Archaeology Project
Prepared as part of the Galloway Glens Can You Dig It scheme, these notes summarise some of the historic archaeological excavations to have taken place in the Galloway Glens area.