DUMFRIESSHIRE, SCOTLAND—Cast-lead sling bullets recently unearthed in
southwestern Scotland are thought to have been used by Roman auxiliary
troops during an attack of a fort on Burnswark Hill some 1,800 years
ago. Such sling bullets range in size from an acorn to a lemon. About 20
percent of the sling bullets recovered from the site had been drilled
with a small hole. Similar sling bullets have been found at ancient
battle sites in Greece, and at first, researchers thought the small
holes might have contained poison. Now archaeologist John Reid of the
Trimontium Trust thinks the projectiles with holes might have produced a
whistling sound intended to terrify opponents, since his brother
pointed out that lead weights used for casting fishing lines can produce
a whistle in flight. “We think it was an all-out assault on the
hilltop, to demonstrate to the natives what would happen to them if they
resisted,” Reid said in a Live Science
report. His team thinks the small bullets, shot in groups of three or
four from a pouch attached to two long cords, were used for close-range
fighting.
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