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Clifton Quarry, Worcestershire: Pits, Posts and Cereals: Archaeological Investigations 20062009 [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 256 pages, aukštis x plotis: 297x210 mm, b/w and colour
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-2018
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789250110
  • ISBN-13: 9781789250114
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 256 pages, aukštis x plotis: 297x210 mm, b/w and colour
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Aug-2018
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • ISBN-10: 1789250110
  • ISBN-13: 9781789250114
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Between 2006 and 2009 Worcestershire Archaeology completed a series of investigations in advance of quarrying at Clifton Quarry, Worcestershire revealing one of the most important sequences of prehistoric to early medieval activity discovered to date from the Central Severn Valley. Well-preserved palaeoenvironmental deposits were recovered from features and associated abandoned channels of the River Severn. Analysis of this evidence is underpinned by a comprehensive program of scientific dating, providing a record of changing patterns of landuse and activity from the Late Mesolithic onwards.
Significant discoveries included a series of Grooved Ware pits and an extensive area of Early to Middle Iron Age activity. One of the Grooved pits was of particular importance as it contained an exceptionally rich material assemblage comprising two whole and four fragmentary polished axes, numerous flint tools and debitage, significant quantities of Durrington Walls and Clacton Style pottery, and abundant charred barley grains and crab apple fragments. The Early to Middle Iron Age activity was notable as, unusual for a lowland site, it was dominated by in excess of 100 four-post granary structures and 130 pits. The full extent of the activity was not established but it appears unenclosed and it is suggested that this represents the specialized storage zone of a much larger settlement. Phases of activity on the floodplain and terraces adjacent to the river also included a Bronze Age burnt mound with associated pits and a trough, a scatter of Romano-British features, and an early medieval timber-lined structure associated with flax retting.


Presents new evidence for Neolithic activity in the form of Grooved ware pits with important environmental data, and for Early–Middle Iron Age floodplain settlement represented unusually by over 100 four-post granaries and 130 pits in a floodplain location in the central Severn Valley
List of figures
vii
List of tables
ix
Contributors x
Project summary xii
Resume xiv
Zusammenfassung xvi
Acknowledgements xviii
Part 1 Introduction
1(9)
Background
1(4)
Landscape and archaeological context
5(2)
Aims
7(3)
Part 2 Methods
10(13)
Documentary search
10(1)
Fieldwork methodology
10(4)
Structural analysis
14(1)
Scientific dating methodology
14(5)
Peter Marshall
John Meadows
Christopher Bronk Ramsey
Gordon Cook
Ian Tyers
Artefact methodology
19(1)
Emily Edwards
Lucija Soberl
Richard P. Evershed
Hugo Anderson-Whymark
Robin Jackson
Laura Griffin
Ian Tyers
Environmental methodology
20(3)
Katie Head
Nick Daffern
Elizabeth Pearson
Alan Clapham
Steven J. Allen
Steven R. Davis
Shirley Wynne
Anthony Brown
Part 3 Excavation Results
23(53)
Geological deposits
23(1)
Palaeochannel deposits
23(2)
Late Neolithic
25(5)
Late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age
30(1)
Middle Bronze Age
31(5)
Early to Middle Iron Age
36(30)
Roman
66(1)
Early medieval
66(6)
Natural features
72(2)
Undated features
74(2)
Part 4 Artefact Analysis
76(56)
Middle Neolithic Pottery
76(1)
Laura Griffin
Late Neolithic and Beaker pottery
76(6)
Emily Edwards
Late Neolithic pottery absorbed residue analysis
82(5)
Lucija Soberl
Richard P. Evershed
Neolithic and Early Bronze Age: fired clay
87(1)
Emily Edwards
Neolithic and Early Bronze Age flint from the Area 10 watching brief
88(8)
Hugo Anderson-Whymark
Flint from the Area 10 excavation
96(2)
Robin Jackson
Neolithic and Early Bronze Age worked and burnt stone
98(16)
Fiona Roe
The Bronze Age and later ceramic assemblages
114(11)
Laura Griffin
Metalwork
125(1)
Laura Griffin
Fire cracked stone
125(1)
Laura Griffin
Iron Age stone objects
125(3)
Ruth Shaffrey
Slag and metalworking residues
128(2)
Derek Hurst
Early medieval wooden waterlogged artefacts from timber-lined structure [ 2121]
130(2)
Ian Tyers
Part 5 Environmental Analysis
132(62)
Pollen
132(8)
Katie Head
Nick Daffern
Plant macrofossils from the palaeochannel
140(1)
Elizabeth Pearson
Entomological results from the palaeochannel
140(4)
Steven R. Davis
Shirley Wynne
Anthony Brown
Plant macrofossils from non-palaeochannel deposits
144(45)
Alan Clapham
Charcoal
189(2)
Alan Clapham
Waterlogged wood
191(3)
Alan Clapham
Part 6 Synthesis and Discussion
194(14)
Palaeolithic
194(1)
Mesolithic
194(1)
Early to Middle Neolithic
195(1)
Late Neolithic
195(4)
Bronze Age
199(1)
Iron Age
200(6)
Romano-British
206(1)
Early medieval
206(1)
Medieval, post-medieval and modern
207(1)
Conclusions
207(1)
Appendix 1 Neolithic axes and Grooved Ware (2006). Thin section analysis 208(7)
Robert A. Ixer
Appendix 2 Pottery and a loomweight from the 2008/9 excavation. Thin section analysis 215(5)
Robert A. Ixer
Bibliography 220(11)
Index 231
Robin Jackson is Senior Archaeological Project Manager at Worcestershire Archive and Archaeology Service with many years experience of designing and implementing archaeological fieldwork and research In recent years he has specialised in working with the mineral extraction industry and on large-scale infrastructure projects with particular research interests in prehistoric archaeology and river valley landscapes. Andrew Mann is a Project Manager with Worcestershire Archives and Archaeological Services where he has been working in commercial archaeology since 2001. He has a specialist interest in environmental archaeology, especially molluscan analysis.