White Meldon

White Meldon is a prehistoric site, a hillfort near the village of Lyne and about 4 mi west of Peebles, in the Scottish Borders, Scotland. It is a Scheduled Monument.

The hillfort on the neighbouring hill Black Meldon is about 1 mi to the west, on the other side of Meldon Burn.

Description
The hill has elevation 427 m, and it is a Marilyn; it is a large hill, overlooking to the west the valley of Meldon Burn. The fort has four concentric lines of defence. The inner two are incomplete; the third, a continuous wall in a ruined state, is about 3.5 m wide, measuring 260 m north–south by 167 m west–east, enclosing an area of about 2.9 ha. Inside this area, the remains of at least 29 round-houses have been discerned, some of which are well-defined platforms.

There are fragments of an outermost rampart, which may not have been finished. The fort may have been built in stages, expanding from the innermost defence, the incomplete outer defence being the last stage; but the sequence of building has not been definitely established.

At the foot of the western slope of White Meldon, at, is a fortified enclosure, on a shelf above the eastern bank of Meldon Burn. It is oval, about 68 m north–south and 52 m west–east, the single rampart being up to 2.1 m high. More than half of the interior is occupied by a later settlement, with a wall that on the west side incorporates the earlier construction. The enclosure is a scheduled monument, no. SM3165.

There is a group of nine house platforms on the north-western slope of the hill, at ; they have diameter 11 –. The group is a scheduled monument, no. SM2712.