 Yn ymlaen o gweithio gwaith i'w ddechreu am y taff acreol oedd y byddwch i'r ygydd yn bobl. Rydym i'n dweud ymlaen i fod yn cymdeithio gyda, gyda'r argyflaen gwnaeth a'r ystod yr ond iawn. Ysgrifennid yng nghymru gyda Llyfrgellol Llyfrgellau, the fact that I am my co-authors work for is dispersed across the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, including thirteen colleges and research institutions, of which the UHI Institute of Archaeology is also dispersed, but with a strong presence in Orkney. So that's where Orkney is, in the world, and we've been working as a team across many small islands, ar y cwrdd sy'n arwain, ac mae'r dyn nhw yn fwy o'r ddag. Mae'r ddweud o'r ddweud yn ei dwych, gyda Llai Gweithredu Cymru ac yn ymddangos i fynd ymddangos ymddangos. Mae'r ddweud o'r ddweud i'r ddweud yn ei ddweud, i ffynol gyda'r ffordd o oedd a'r ffordd o'r ddweud, yn ôl arno ddweud i'r ddweud i gynnig iawn. Mae'r cwltrwch gyrraedd o'r gyrsio'r cyfarfod sy'n ogymell yn cyfnodol i ddweud i'r pwbl yma, dydag oedd i'r cyfnodol i'r Gweithio Gweithio Gweithio Gwll Seifrith. Yma, mae'r gwrs iawn o'r gwrs iawn o bod yn ymgyrch yn gweithio gweithio gyrsio'r gwrs iawn o'r gyrsio'r gweithio i gydigolol i'r gweithio gweithio gweld hynny, a'r syniadau cair â ymddugmarfeyddiaeth o'r gweithio'r ysgrifennol yn ymddug wneud ffiythidol a gweithio'r rhan o'r cymdeithasol a phobl. Roedd hynny'n dod o'r ymddugau'r problemau oherwydd yr Erosion yn Orknyd, wedi gweld yn dda i'r gwnaeth ar hyn o'r ysgrifennol, yn yr ysgrifennol, yn ymddugwyr o'r cyffredinol yn Ysgrifennol. ac yw'r cyfnod y dyfodol yw Scarabraerio Y World Heritage Site. Rhape Nwys, y gwaith gwaith ar y dyfodol, yn y Pysifol yw'r cyfnod, yn y llwyfr yw'r 2,000 oes. Mae'r rhape nwys yn llwyfr yn llwyfr. Mae'n rhaid i'r llwyr, mae'n dweud o 20 oes. Mae'r ysgwrs yn ymddangos i ddechrau'r llaw, mae'r hynny'n gwneud amlwg mewn cymryd yn cyd-ddiolol, ac mae'r cyflwytu yn ei gwerthoedd, yw amser yn y cyfwyd. Mae'r cyflwytu yn ei gwerthoedd yn gyfwyd. Mae'r cyflwytaeth yn ychydig yn ei gwerthoedd. Mae'r cyflwytaeth yn yr ysgrifetio sydd yn cyfrifol. Mae'r cyflwytaeth yn ymgyrchol ydy i'r cyflwytaeth, yw'r ydych chi'n gweld o'r ystod o'r dyfodol iawn i'r ystod o'i ddau cyfnodol, a'r ddau'r cyfnodol, i'n mynd i'n gallu'r wneud ffordd o'r cyflogau a'r cyflogau yn fwyllgor. Mae'r ddau'r hynny ymddiannol ar gyfer oedyn香wyr ar gyfer y cyfnodol i'r cyfnodol. Yn y cyfrwyng yma ymddangos mewn rhan o ffordd, ymweliad i'r cyfnodol, The New York Times quotes Camilo Rappu, the head of Rappanui's national park, who says, you feel an impotacy in this, do not be able to protect the bones of your ancestors, it hurts immensely. So the inclusion of school children in the excavation and geophysics project that was undertaken was an innovation in Rappanui and was so well received that it said that it will become a requirement for any future excavation teams. The project continues with contacts being developed between children in Orkney and Rappanui and the team, including the director of Rappanui's Museum, are now also working in Cook Islands and this is where they are. About 20,000 people live in the Cooks today with three times that number of Cook Islanders now living in New Zealand. Nearly 70% of the Cook's economy is based on tourism so this is very similar in fact to Orkney and to Rappanui. The Cook Islands work led naturally on from research questions being pursued on Rappanui on ancient roads and coastal circuit monuments. The I2Tachy council are now looking to adopt our inclusive style of research, incorporating it into guidelines for best practice for future researchers. So here we created a sites and monuments record that can now be added to and built up. The Strip of Shawl is the destination of most tourists going to Rowsie and Orkney Like the South Sea islands, one of the problems with many of Orkney islands is that the archaeology is situated on the coast. Recent geophysics programmes here in Rowsie show that the coastal area really does hold most of the sites and behind the coastal fringe there are significantly less. The areas shown are designated by the state as being of national importance. If the concept of sustainability includes the concept of passing down heritage in good order to the next generation, we have to consider that this storm-battered eroding coastal heritage is a problem for our time. So we welcome the, for instance, Bradford University and City University in New York wanted to work on us on the erosion problem in Rowsie, where the study has been intensive and long-term and collaborative. The island of Sandy and the island of Rowsie both have very small numbers of people living in them, many of whom are elderly and like all small islands, our active population is already working. So we're talking about population between 200 and 500 people here and they're already engaged with volunteering and community enterprises and work so for the ambulance service, the fire service, all these things they have to work to do. So it's not possible to rely solely on local input for long-term project work. However, a good proportion of the population turn out to day events and identify strongly with the programme and a local resident asking about a particular banner that was advertising the archaeology work to visitors said it makes me feel proud to think about it. The community must and does have a role in guiding the strategic use of archaeology at these sites. So based upon community interest voiced up public meetings and in engaging with more recent history, UHIs set out to do work at Scale and Brock on the Westerner's Shore where we have good historical records from saga times of the 13th century through to the 19th century clearances. And we've also been working on the standing buildings of the 19th century with Historic Environment Scotland on short-term training opportunities for a low-cost survey with transferable skills such as plain tabling and photogrammetry. And the what's in my midden days engaged children and a new audience including farmers with past agricultural practice and climate. In Papawestri Islanders work from the UHI to model an eroding site there recorded during the beast from the east in March and it didn't take too long as a new technique and there will now be reference points for future monitoring work and an ability to digitally build 3D models through time and following erosive incidents and to disseminate these results more widely. In the Island of Sandy we chose a very deep and rich erosion site at Poole to undertake a project and creative practice. Eroding sites are not easy to visit or to experience. Ancient artefacts mingle on the ground with plastic debris and these areas can be seen as ones of grim dissolution. The workshop was an innovative form of experience bringing together archaeologists, artists, a clothes designer, a folklorist, environmental scientists and community for a field workshop. The Sandy workshop participants observed and recorded artefacts and materials both ancient and modern and used archaeological techniques of 3D laser scanning, GPS survey, artefacts recording combined with photography, drawing, sculpture and text to explore impressions of place and environment. Folklore around the dreadful Nufflevee inspired a new creation, a monster who inhabits the sea and recovers detritus from the coast. A film by Mark Jenkins documents the Sandy workshop and tells the story of the monster. A creature was created from the detritus and this creature went on to be exhibited in a shop window in the town of Kirkwall and then into the internationally significant gallery, art gallery in Stromnas. In terms of text we made concrete poetry. Concrete poetry is where the meaning or effect of the words are partly or wholly conveyed by visual means and here an exposed section has a stratigraphic commentary created and nailed to it by the community before being rebuilt in land. In an ironic way this echoes the more standard heritage practice of moving threatened monuments or parts of the main land. As and Keir's recent PhD findings included that engaging with these issues in this instant rising sea levels in the eroding coast in a local context was shown to affect behaviour change and motivate people to a state of action. So this was our conclusion from these workshops that they actually lift people's attention to climate change and to modifying behaviour for instance towards littering in the sea. So it's been a very effective use of the local heritage as well as being part of the greater research programs that we undertake which very much.