Archaeologists have used innovative techniques to reveal the secrets of an artificial island older than Stonehenge in a Scottish loch, discovering a large timber platform hidden beneath it. The island in Loch Bhorgastail on the Isle of Lewis appears to be made of stone – however, University of Southampton researchers have found that timber was used for the basis of the structure. While it was known that there was some wood underneath the island, the extent of the timber structure was not discovered until excavation and analysis started. During fieldwork at the crannog, archaeologists uncovered a layered wood and brushwood construction under the stone, and found hundreds of pieces of Neolithic pottery submerged in the surrounding water. University of Southampton archaeologist Dr Stephanie Blankshein said: “When we actually started excavating is when we realised that it was actually this coherent, quite large timber structure that was under what you would see as the stone island today.…