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Accessibility Statement

This is the accessibility statement for the Strathnaver Province Archaeology Project web site. If you have any questions or comments, feel free to contact the webmistress@guard.archaeology.gla.ac.uk.

Access keys

Windows users can navigate through the key elements of the site using the ALT+Accesskey (defined below). If you are a Mac user, use CTRL+Accesskey. Please note that some Internet Explorer users may need to hit the return or enter key to activate a link.

Access Key

Target

X

skip navigation

1

home page

2

location map

3

about the project

4

about durness

5

about strathnaver

6

2004 fieldwork

7

2005 fieldwork

8

2006 fieldwork

9

2007 fieldwork

10

project team

11

links

12

participating

13

credits

14

GUARD

0

accessibility statement

Tab Key Navigation

Users who prefer to navigate through the site using the tab key can access main content and navigation features.

Standards compliance

The pages within the web site comply with all priority 1 guidelines of the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. We are working on reaching compliance with priority 2 and 3 guidelines. The pages within the site validate as XHTML 1.0 Transitional and all pages on this site use structured semantic markup. H1 tags are used for main titles, H2 tags and lower for subtitles. The cascading style sheets used are validated to the Cascading Style Sheets, level 2 (CSS2) Specification, as defined by the W3C.

Navigation

At the top of each page there is a 'Skip to main content' link mapped to a transparent graphic. This allows users of assistive technologies (e.g. screen readers) to bypass navigation links and go straight to the main page content. There is a single global navigation bar on each page, positioned on the left hand side of the page.

Images

All content images used in this site include descriptive 'alt' and 'title' attributes. No flashing graphics are used.

Visual design

This site uses only relative font sizes, compatible with the user-specified 'text size' option in visual browsers. Style sheets are used to designate font size and colour, both in 'ordinary' text, linked text and layout. If your browser or browsing device does not support stylesheets at all, the content of each page is still readable.

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