A metal-detecting enthusiast has unearthed the most significant Viking treasure hoard ever found in Scotland, shedding light on the warriors' links with the rest of Europe.
The artefacts, many of them unique, include silver ingots, brooches and armbands, gold objects and items of Irish origin.
The trove, worth hundreds of thousands of euro, includes more than 100 objects dating from the ninth and 10th centuries and will help in understanding the history of medieval Scotland.
There was also a decorated solid silver Christian cross and a Carolingian silver pot which has not yet been emptied, from an area of modern-day Germany.
Derek McLennan, 47, found the treasure buried some 60 centimetres below the ground in Dumfriesshire, southwest Scotland.
The precise location is being kept a secret while authorities work to preserve the site and ensure no more buried treasure remains.
The haul was found in a field belonging to the Church of Scotland.
Retired businessman Mr McLennan began metal detecting three years ago and the haul is his third outstanding find in a year, following two medieval coin hoards.
"It's certainly the most significant Viking hoard from Scotland," said Stuart Campbell, head of Scotland's Treasure Trove Unit, who is overseeing the handling of the find.
"It is the biggest hoard of Viking material found in Scotland since the 19th century. It's hugely significant, not just for Britain but for western Europe because it's a very unusual hoard.
"It contains objects from all over Europe. There are amulets from Ireland, jewellery from Scandinavia, gold jewellery that is probably Anglo-Saxon, and there is the Carolingian silver pot from what is now Germany," he said.
Mr McLennan will receive a full finders' fee based on the treasure's market value when it is bought by a museum and has agreed to share the proceeds with the Church of Scotland.
The Carolingian silver pot alone could be worth around €250,000.
"We still don't know exactly what is in the pot, but I hope it could reveal who these artefacts belonged to, or at least where they came from," Mr McLennan said.