The remains of a chapel can be seen near the west coast of the island. The site was excavated in the late 1950s and in 2000/2001. In 1958 28 Pictish silver and silver-gilt objects and the jaw bone of a porpoise were discovered buried in a wooden box under a cross-marked slab close to the altar by a local schoolboy called Douglas Coutts. The treasure is now in the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh but replicas can be seen in the excellent Shetland Museum in Lerwick. The treasure may have been buried in the chapel as early as the late 8th or early 9th centuries or possibly several centuries later. Archaeological remains on St Ninian's Isle date back to the Iron Age.
St Ninian's Isle was inhabited until 1775 but is now only used to graze sheep. It is also home to many rabbits. Fulmars, puffins, black guillemots and cormorants breed on Hich Holm, a small rocky island off the west coast of St Ninian's Isle. The rare bulbous buttercup can be found on St Ninian's Isle.
St Ninian's Isle from Bigton
Mainland from St Ninian's Isle
Ruined Chapel on St Ninian's Isle
St Ninian's Isle - looking south towards Colsay and Fora Ness
South east coast of St Ninian's Isle
Shetland Mainland from St Ninian's Isle
St Ninian's Isle from Scousburgh Hill
St Ninian's Isle from Bigton
Chapel on St Ninian's Isle
St Ninian's Isle from Bigton
Tombolo from St Ninian's Isle
South east coast of St Ninian's Isle
Looking north up the east coast of St Ninian's Isle towards the tombolo
Looking south towards Inns Holm
Inns Holm from the south coast of St Ninian's Isle
Eroding cliffs on the south coast of St Ninian's Isle
High Herbi Clett, south coast of St Ninian's Isle
Inns Holm from St Ninian's Isle
High Herbi Clett from St Ninian's Isle
Stacks off the south coast of St Ninian's Isle
Looking south from St Ninian's Isle towards Colsay
St Ninian's Well
Tombolo from St Ninian's Isle