Aberdeen Science Centre

Aberdeen Science Centre

Aberdeen Science Centre

Aberdeen Science Centre is a science museum in Aberdeen. It displays exhibits which are aimed mainly at younger children. It attracts primary school groups around the year and its exhibits are ‘hands on’ so that everything can be played with and examined. The centre is a registered non-profit organisation that is funded by the public and donations from local corporate sponsors.

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Picture of the Day

4th May 2019

The view from Footdee looking towards Aberdeen

Cruickshank Botanic Garden

Cruickshank Botanic Garden

“The Cruickshank Botanic Garden is situated in Old Aberdeen on the King’s College campus of the University of Aberdeen and is a partnership between the University and the Cruickshank Charitable Trust

The Garden exists to promote an appreciation of the beauty, diversity and importance of plants, and an understanding of their role in the natural world

This beautiful and peaceful 11 acre Garden offers year round interest to visitors. It has shrub borders, a rock and water garden, sunken garden, rose garden, herbaceous border and an arboretum, and houses a nationally important collection of over 2500 labelled plants.”

Cruickshank Botanic Garden website

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The Cruickshank Botanic Garden at Britain Express

Video of the Day

3rd May 2019

Royal Deeside

The Tolbooth Museum

Aberdeen Tolbooth Museum

“The Tolbooth Museum is one of Aberdeen’s oldest buildings and one of the best-preserved 17th century gaols in Scotland. It features displays on local history and the development of crime and punishment through the centuries. The Tolbooth Museum provides a unique experience in the form of its atmospheric 17th and 18th century cells, original doors and barred windows. Displays include the Maiden and the blade of Aberdeen’s 17th century guillotine.”

Tolbooth Museum website

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Picture of the Day

1st May 2019

St Cyrus Beach

Bennachie and the Battle of Mons Graupius

Posssible locations for the Battle of Mons Graupius

“He [Agricola] sent his fleet ahead to plunder at various points and thus spread uncertainty and terror, and, with an army marching light, which he had reinforced with the bravest of the Britons and those whose loyalty had been proved during a long peace, reached the Graupian Mountain, which he found occupied by the enemy. The Britons were, in fact, undaunted by the loss of the previous battle, and welcomed the choice between revenge and enslavement. They had realised at last that common action was needed to meet the common danger, and had sent round embassies and drawn up treaties to rally the full force of all their states.”

Tacitus, Agricola (XXIX)

According to Tacitus, the Battle of Mons Graupius was fought between a Roman army under the command of Gnaeus Julius Agricola and the Pictish tribes of the North-East of Scotland. It probably took place in AD 83 or 84 and was said to have resulted in a convincing victory for the Romans.

Although never colonised by the Romans, there were several campaigns in the North-East which resulted in the establishment of temporary marching camps, with, possibly, a sizeable military presence at the site called Devana, which is presumed to lie near to mouth of the River Dee.

The exact site of the Battle of Mons Graupius is unknown but one possibility is near Bennachie, 25 miles north west of Aberdeen.

Bennachie has several tops, including Oxen Craig, at 528 metres, and Mither Tap (518m) which has an Iron Age fort on its summit. Though not particularly high, compared to other peaks within Scotland, the mountain is very prominent, owing to its isolation and the relative flatness of the surrounding terrain, and dominates the skyline.

View from Mither Tap

The Gordon Way, a waymarked hiking trail, runs for 12 miles through the Bennachie Forest. The route is one of series maintained by the Forestry Commission and Aberdeenshire Council.

Picture of the Day

30th April 2019

Banchory Golf Course