Category Archives: Education

Day five, Friday round up – all change!

Panoramic view over Pegwell
Pegwell Panorama

Friday brings resolution to some of our questions and raises more problems for our team of University of Kent students, our stalwart volunteers and the Trust team. When I mentioned that we had finished a segment through the ring ditch yesterday I meant that we thought we had finished.

Reaching the base of the eastern cut in Segment 2

In our second segment through the ring ditch, a heavy day of digging revealed two distinct cuts on the eastern and western sides. The western cut had  a symmetrical profile, with steeply sloping upper edges breaking to a deep straight sided cut and breaking sharply at the bottom  at the flat base. This cut is much more like the typical section of a well preserved ring ditch in Thanet.

So why does our first segment which we thought we had completed yesterday (see yesterday’s post) look so different? What are the prospects for the third segment being excavated further along the north eastern edge?

North facing section of segment 2, Now that's a proper barrow ditch,
North facing section of segment 2, Now that’s a proper barrow ditch,
Mattock one, chalk nil
Mattock one, chalk nil

The issue was resolved today when it turned out our first ditch segment, with the strange benched profile and possible recut, was excavated only to the top of a compacted fill of chalk rubble and silt. Having pondered the situation with a fresh pair of eyes on the feature (thanks PCH) the chalk had to go! Two tons of chalk rubble stand no chance against the team armed with finely honed skills with a mattock and considerable progress was made toward matching the ditch profile with its neighbor immediately to the north, solving the problem of why these two segments appeared so different to each other.

The second segment presents a new problem now, with a clear second cut feature, which seems to have been excavated on the inner edge of the ring ditch. Is it discrete pit or evidence for a much more substantial recut ditch? Time and much more excavation will tell.

Segment 3 under way
Segment 3 under way

Further north the third segment excavated through the ring ditch to add more to our understanding of the plan of the ditch circuit , looks as if it will also end up being as deep as the other two segments.

There’s more progress to report on the southern side of the site, where we have been excavating our segments through a later feature, possible a quarry pit, but perhaps a more substantial feature. A section through undisturbed deposits and another emptying a previous section excavated in 1982 have found among some shallower pit cuts. a steep sided cut feature which extends into both areas of excavation. Are these simply random chalk quarries or is this one of the deep cut sunken features, possibly once associated with structures, that we have encountered many times before in Thanet? We have more definition of our targets here now but the questions are not  resolved yet…

Segments through the  feature on the southern side of the ring ditch
Segments through the feature on the southern side of the ring ditch

Lucky we have another week to go! More updates after a well earned weekend of rest for the team.

Four days in and things get complicated

Placing scales for the photograph
Placing scales for the photograph

One segment excavated through the ring ditch was completed today, the cut photographed and the section drawn.

This segment proved difficult to interpret, with the platforms either side of the cut and the V shaped gully at the base, the profile is unusual for a round-barrow ditch in Thanet. The fills were fairly undifferentiated making the stratigraphy harder to work out and the working theory is that a flat based ditch was recut by a later V shaped ditch on a similar alignment.

Ring ditch - Segment 1 north facing section
Ring ditch – Segment 1 north facing section

More complicated is that a second segment  meant to show us more of the ditch, has a very different character. At the moment it appears that two very deep cut features, pits or deep ditches, are present not far from the relatively shallow profile to the south.

The excavation continues in this area and we hope to work this one out tomorrow…

Ring ditch Segment 2- deep features maiking things complicated
Ring ditch Segment 2- deep features making things complicated

Work is also continuing on the later pits that cut the ring-ditch on its southern side, with a very complicated picture emerging of small intercut pits, perhaps associated with a larger cut feature. These are perhaps medieval or possibly Roman in date, but dating evidence has been sparse to date. We hope to get a clearer idea of this (and some pictures) tomorrow.

For anyone who appreciates Umberto Eco, here’s an example of a journey into hyper-reality, a ‘real fake’.

Athenian_owl_small
Replica Athenian owl coin

A collector’s replica of an ancient Athenian coin (read about the real thing here) found on the spoil heap at our site with a metal detector (the field was used for car boot fairs).

Simultaneously the most historic and iconic image and yet absolutely artificial and completely out of place. Now where else have we heard of an artificial owl. Just look into my eyes…

Image of the replicant owl from Bladerunner
Replicant owl

A third busy day on the dig

A great deal of activity today and a few visits, planned and unexpected. We made a great deal of progress with excavating sections through the undisturbed northern area of the ring ditch. Our first section reached the bottom of the ditch, showing it had a symmetrical, but unusual profile (photo update tomorrow).

LOM-5_UKCTD_day3_sections
Excavation continues on day three…

However, the northern section proved less easy to interpret and it may be we have evidence that the ditch had possibly been re-cut around the circuit of the ditch, or had been cut by a later linear ditch.The features and their relationships are not clear yet and more work needs to be done in the next few days. The recut may explain why the significant finds from the upper fill of what should be a Bronze Age feature were a medieval jug handle and a peg tile pierced with a hole for hanging the tile on a roof.

Medieval jug handle and peg tile sherd
Medieval jug handle and peg tile sherd

We also carried on with a series of small sections to explore the later features cut into the southern side of the barrow. These may be a series of pits or perhaps a larger feature. There’s more to be done in this area and we really appreciated the help of two of our regular volunteers who joined our University of Kent student excavators for the day.

Later in the afternoon we were visited by the team from the Powell-Cotton Museum, where many of the finds from the earlier excavations on the site are stored. A good opportunity to match the finds in the Museum with their context in the landscape; and a chance to discuss how we can work with our local Museum in the future.

 

 

 

Day two on the dig

We began excavating sections through a stretch of the ring ditch which has not been sampled before. The edge of the trench at the northern end of the feature had to be defined so we could locate the outer edge and position one section across the ditch.

Excavating sections through the ring ditch
Excavating sections through the ring ditch

Preliminary geophysical survey with a  magnetometer showed that a composite plan of the area produced after the  excavations in 1981/82 had a serious error, placing the ring ditch around 17m too far south of its actual location. It is becoming clear that the feature’s real  location in the landscape is more significant to the physical landscape. occupying the plateau at the crest of the downland ridge overlooking Pegwell Bay. This space, with horizons falling away on all but the north west side where the plateau continues,  is unique  in the natural landscape in this location. The position shares similarities with the location of many round-barrows and other ring ditch features in Thanet, the locations owing more to a careful choice of local topographic conditions rather than a reference to a wider cosmology.

Sectioning the later pit featureIn a later period, as yet undetermined, the southern edge of the round barrow was cut by a series of pits and possibly a  large cut feature. We bagan to try to define the dimensions and shape of the feature by excavating another small section into it, As we make progress with this the nature of the later features will be more clearly defined and perhaps dated in the next few days of work at the site.

First day’s work at Lord of the Manor

The team assembled on site today to begin work on the training excavation at Lord of the Manor. Our first morning was spent reviewing the site of the training excavation and its place among other features and past excavations in the surrounding landscape. Discussion focused on the aim of the project followed a closer look at the excavation area.

The excavation is designed  to test the interpretation of an investigation carried out in 1981 and 1982 by re-examining  a sample of the archaeological features on the ground. Initial review suggests that we may have a lot to learn from this process. The earlier sample of the site appears to have been quite small and there is a great deal of scope to refine the plan.

The team clean he surface  of the archaeological features
Cleaning the surface of the features

Later in the day we concentrated on cleaning and defining the features in the excavation area, photographing the area and identifying the location of earlier interventions. We also spent time discussing the potential location of sample sections to dig in the following days. On the surface of the undisturbed fill of the wide ring ditch we recovered a sherd of  flint tempered Middle Bronze Age pottery.

Bronze Age flint tempered pottery sherd
Bronze Age flint tempered pottery sherd

A promising start with more important discoveries to come…

Training Excavation at lord of the Manor 2013

One hundred and sixty six years and three months ago, three men; William Henry Rolfe, Charles Roach-Smith (biography) and Thomas Wright (biography) began an archaeological investigation at a site near Ramsgate. In the previous year Anglo-Saxon burials and Roman finds had been made when a deep railway cutting was excavated through the open chalk downland at a place called Ozengall Down, or Osendun.

Over many years, starting in 1976, the site has been explored by members of Thanet’s archaeological community. Over time a landscape was revealed that was settled in the early prehistoric period and continued to be a place of cultural significance into the early medieval period. Even after a little more than a century and a half of archaeological investigation, there is still more to learned about this landscape.

The training excavation

In August this year a training excavation led by the Trust for Thanet Archaeology, with students from the University of Kent, will once again be exploring this hillside overlooking Pegwell Bay. The project’s aim is to look again at we think we know about the settlement on the site. The results of older excavations need to be checked with modern methods and the knowledge we have already gained reviewed and revised while it is still possible to access the site.

Excavation area overview
Excavation area overview

Initial targets are to revisit part of the area of an earlier excavation of part of an Anglo-Saxon cemetery and re-plan graves that were emptied  in 1982, with the aim of verifying the location of the original survey of the site (see our Virtual Museum page on Anglo-Saxon Thanet). We will also sample a small area of a Bronze Age round barrow to reconsider the previous interpretation of how the circular ditch, which once surrounded a central mound, was filled (see our Virtual Museum page on round barrows). The team will also investigate how pits that were dug through the barrow in a later period  show whether it had survived in the  landscape and possibly discover something about  the  way people who dug the pits understood the older monument.

Looking forward

Our two week dig excavation hopes to answer some of these questions and others that will arise as we carry out the latest investigation of this historic part of Thanet’s landscape.

Follow the progress of the dig

Updates to these journal entries will include key finds, new ideas and new questions that we can ask of the archaeological records and the features that we excavate.

Archaeology for You 2013

De_Bello_Canzio
De Bello Canzio stand at A4U 2013

After a very successful event here are some images from the day and we have also uploaded a short video of the Archaeology of You event held on the 13th of July to our Facebook page

Archaeology for You – 2013

 

Our Archaeology for You event will be on from 10.00am to 4.30pm on the 13th of July this year, in the gardens of the Powell-Cotton Museum, Quex Park during the National Festival of British Archaeology

Download the flyer for Archaeology for You here

What is archaeology for you?

Archaeology for You is a day of hands-on activities and workshops exploring the methods used by archaeologists to discover, record and analyse the remains left by the people of the past. We aim to give you a taste of the skills archaeologists use to preserve the past be recording sites and examining the finds that come from them.

WORDS AND PENCILS

Try your hand at recording the evidence of the past with section drawing, planning and stratification. There will be a mini-site to demonstrate all you need to know about archaeological recording methods.

GIVE IT A SWIRL

See what hidden evidence for past diets and environment are revealed by processing soil samples by washing them through with water.

SEEING BENEATH THE SOIL

Geophysical prospection methods can reveal archaeology beneath the ground without digging. Take part in a survey using ground resistance and magnetometry.

We have workshops on magnetometry and resistivity going on over the day. If you are interested in how geophys works, this is for you!

FINDS AND FACTS

Looking closely at pottery sherds can tell us about the industries art and society of past people. Take part in processing pottery from the archaeologists finds tray to expert analysis. Learn to tell your prehistoric from your post medieval and your urns and amphorae from platters and pipkins.

INSPIRED BY THE PAST

Try making your own pottery using examples from the archaeological record. Create your own mosaics showing your stories from the past, present and future.Historic costumes and more…

New Iron Age and Roman reenactment group De Bello Canzio

Iron Age and Roman reenactors De Bello Canzio will be with us over the day at Archaeology for You. With authentic costumes, armour and artefacts this will a be a fascinating glimpse into the past.

Exploring our Past – Preserving our Heritage, 25th Anniversary Celebrations – Part 2

TouchdownCelebrations for the Trusts 25th Anniversary continued on Saturday 27th of April 2013 with a day conference titled Exploring our Past – Preserving our Heritage, also held at the Broadstairs campus of Canterbury Christchurch University.

Six talks were given about aspects of the exploration and preservation of Thanet’s heritage on the themes of Landscape, Townscape and ‘Peoplescape’.

IntroOnce the congregation of archaeological and heritage minded people attending the conference finished their welcoming teas and coffees at the Touchdown Bar, they swiftly moved to the large lecture theatre for the start of the conference at 9.45 am.  The Chairman of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology, Simon Perry, gave a welcoming speech and introduced the first talk, given by Rod LeGear.

Rod LeGear speakingRod, a retired mining engineer and a founding member of the Kent Underground Research Group, explained how Thanet’s chalk geology has been exploited in the past by local industry and agriculture. Raw chalk, taken from underground sources ranging from shallow pits to more extensive mines where thousands of tons were produced, was used as a fertiliser and burnt to produce lime for agriculture and to make bricks for the thriving building industry which created Thanet’s sea side suburbs. Many of these pits and mines have been put to other uses and remain visible in Thanet’s landscape with careful observation and historical research. Rod’s presentation drew attention to these industries as valid parts of our heritage and records of lives and labour of many people.

Mark SamuelDr. Mark Samuel, an architectural archaeologist based in Ramsgate, followed Rod with a talk on a survey that explored the remains of defensive structures that were built to protect the Pegwell Bay area under the threat of German invasion during the early years of the Second World War. Images were shown of the remains of many of the defences that can still be seen in the landscape today with careful observation and a relatively modest amount of field work. Mark explained how the defences were expected to be used in the event of a German invasion and presented some of his ideas about how the importance of the south coast of Thanet and Pegwell Bay might have been perceived during the Second World War, perhaps explaining why many of the sites he surveyed had been lost to history until his survey and research uncovered this secret landscape.

After a brief break at the Touchdown Bar for more tea, coffee and biscuits, everyone regrouped in the lecture hall for a talk by Emma Boast the Director of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology.

EJBEmma gave a presentation on the history and importance of Margate Pier, beginning by discussing how the research for the talk was produced for a survey of the pier carried out by the Trust in 2005, in the planning stages for the original design of the Turner Contemporary. A history of the pier was given, beginning with its construction in 1810 and Emma explained how the pier has had a variety of uses for leisure and industry since its construction. Many people were intrigued by the miniature railway which once ran along the harbour wall, prompting much discussion after the talk and later in the lunch break. Emma finished by mentioning some of the changes that have occurred to the fabric of the pier that have left visible traces connected to the development of the town, making the pier a key element of Margate’s historic townscape which records the changing emphasis of the lives and industries that have made Margate thrive in the past.

Nick Dermott1The final speaker of the morning session was Nick Dermott, Conservation Officer for Thanet District Council, who talked about how, as pioneers of mass entertainment, Thanet’s historic townscapes were shaped by the early growth of the leisure industry. Beginning by looking at the history of pleasure gardens and the remarkable survival of one example at Ranelagh Grove at St Peters, Nick went on to talk about the history of Margate as an archetype of the seaside town where beach holidays originated. Nick spoke about the popularity of sea bathing in Margate and even the contemporary issues surrounding the development of mixed and even naked bathing.  Keeping to the beaches, other forms of entertainment were touched on, such as the popular Donkey rides on the beach and Punch and Judy shows. Nick also looked at other forms of entertainment from Margate’s past away from the beach; the theatres, music halls, cinemas, Winter Gardens, West Cliff Hall and the importance to Margate of the development of Dreamland. The presentation was richly illustrated with wonderful and rare photographs, posters and books which reflected the rich diversity of Thanet as a tourist destination in the past present and future.

A break for an hour for lunch gave a chance for attendees to view display tables set up in the foyer of the University building.  Two displays were presented by the Trust; one with local finds including hand axes and pottery, the other included a Roman soldier’s costume which the Trust produced for their education activities, along with a copy of a book the Trust is publishing which shows how to make the armour and fittings as a craft project. Another display publicised the Isle of Thanet Archaeological Society and gave visitors the opportunity to join their organisation.  David Crawford-White, one of the afternoon speakers gave information on some of the community archaeology projects he has managed and advice on how to apply for heritage lottery funding.

Bob PantonyThe first presentation in the afternoon session after lunch, was given by Bob Pantony, a long standing member of the Isle of Thanet Archaeological Society. Ably assisted in his slide show by Mr. Bob Varnham, Bob Pantony spoke of the contribution of Doctor Arthur Rowe of Margate, and his father before him, to the study of the Geology and Archaeology of Thanet in the early 20th century. Dr. Rowe’s private archaeological collection was bequeathed to the people of Margate and included finds from his own excavations as well as discoveries made during the expansion of Thanet’s towns, along with material his father, Dr. Thomas Smith Rowe, had collected. The senior Dr. Rowe was firmly established as an early archaeologist in Thanet who contributed a great deal to the collection that his son left to the people of Margate and Bob had even traced an interesting line drawn portrait of him from a local newspaper. Images were shown of many of the items that were formerly in the collection, some of which are now held by the British Museum. Attention was drawn to the poor state of preservation of much of the Rowe bequest material in other collections which has not been properly conserved.  It was evident from Bob’s efforts to trace the items from the Rowe Bequest that Arthur Rowe was a pioneer of intellectual enquiry into Thanet’s past, an important element of Thanet’s historic ‘peoplescape’.

David Crawford-White gave the last talk of the day on the community aspects of the recent archaeology project associated with the East Kent Access road scheme and on the potential for securing Heritage Lottery funding for archaeological projects.  David is the Outreach and Learning Officer for Oxford Archaeology East based in Cambridgeshire and ran the outreach programme in Thanet for East Kent Access.  In the first part of the talk David spoke about the community aspects of the East Kent Access road scheme archaeology project, considering which community involvement had the most success and how these could be developed to fit other community projects. This was a useful review of the project for anyone working in community archaeology.

David CWThe second aspect of David’s talk explored ideas for Heritage lottery funded projects in the region, based on his extensive experience of successful bids for Heritage Lottery funding for community heritage projects. Giving an overview of the lottery grants that can be used by local groups to promote heritage and examples of successful Young roots and Our Heritage grants, David spoke in detail about the community archaeology projects that these grants funded. Hand-outs prepared by David on the grants available, as well as examples of successful bids for guidance on what could be included in a grant application were included in the conference packs given out to people attending. The last presentation looked forward to integrating participation and enjoyment of Thanet’s Heritage as long term goal for the Isle’s ‘peoplescape’. A challenge was set to the heritage community of the region, to replicate projects with the scope and scale of some of the examples that were shown in David’s presentation.

The day ended at 4.00pm with a message of thanks to the attendees and speakers from the Chairman and Gerald Moody, Deputy Director of the Trust.

We would like to thank everyone who has been involved with the Trust for Thanet Archaeology over the last 25 years and we hope to see many of you at other events in the future.

Anniversary Celebration Part 1 – Keynote Lecture

Find out more about the Trust for Thanet Archaeology (PDF File)

Celebrations for the Trusts 25th Anniversary began this week with a successful keynote lecture given by the Trust for Thanet Archaeology’s Deputy Director Gerald Moody.
Many people with an interest in Thanet’s Archaeology met at the Touchdown Bar on the Broadstairs Campus of Canterbury Christchurch University where they were welcomed with a complimentary drink and refreshments, followed by toasts from the Trusts President David Steed and the Chair, Simon Perry. David Steed spoke briefly about his involvement in the formation of the Trust in 1988, reading from a letter detailing the programme of an event that was held that year to welcome its foundation.

The focus of the celebration on Tuesday was the Keynote lecture given by the Trust’s Deputy Director Gerald Moody. The talk first looked back at the early archaeologists who worked in Thanet in the nineteenth century, moving on to show how important these early excavations were  in developing Thanet’s archaeological record, and how influential they were in the foundation of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology. Gerald emphasised how the excavation in the late 1970’s of a prehistoric site at Lord of The Manor, Ramsgate influenced the late David Perkins into developing his interest in archaeology. Eventually David was employed in the Manpower Services Scheme to work on excavations at Lord of the Manor and other archaeological projects and museum work, including the Ramsgate Maritime Museum display of artefacts from HMS Stirling Castle. With the advent of PPG16 and the end of the Manpower Services scheme, David became the first Director of the newly founded Trust for Thanet Archaeology. Later, Gerald described how a young girl was taken by her father to visit the Lord of Manor excavations in 1978. This girl, Emma Boast, eventually trained as an archaeologist at York University and was later taken under the wing of David Perkins, who helped with information for a dissertation project on Anglo-Saxon Thanet. Employed by the Trust in the late 1990s after working as a field archaeologist in North Yorkshire, Emma Boast became the second Director of the Trust for Thanet Archaeology in 2003 following David Perkins’ retirement. In 2003 she was also joined at the Trust by Gerald Moody, who would later become Deputy Director.

The talk detailed some of the significant excavations that the Trust has carried out and mentioned many of the people who have helped the Trust, as volunteers and employees. With the amount of development led excavation work decreasing in the recession, Gerald Moody emphasized the importance of the Trust’s education work and showed examples of activities at local schools and the University of Kent.

Hearing the talk given last night it is clear that the Trust for Thanet Archaeology, originally under the leadership of David Perkins, and now by Emma Boast and Gerald Moody has grown into an important local heritage organisation dedicated to bringing Thanet’s archaeology to the public. After the first 25 years successful years since its establishment, anyone interested in preserving and promoting Thanet’s archaeology can feel secure in the knowledge of the Trusts success. Long may it continue.

pic for journal blog