
EAA 82, 1998: Archaeology and the Landscape in the Lower Blackwater Valley
S. Wallis and M. Waughman
£12.00
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This report presents the results from three excavations in the lower Blackwater valley. The sites were identified as cropmarks on aerial photographs and were excavated in advance of large-scale gravel extraction. All three sites revealed evidence of changing landscape use. The cropmarks belong to an extensive series running along much of the north side of the Blackwater estuary, and results from other sites and recent excavations are included in the discussion which forms the final chapter of the report.
The main discoveries at Slough House Farm were a Neolithic enclosure, Iron Age settlement, Saxon timber-lined wells and a Saxon pit containing metalworking debris. At Chigborough Farm, a putative Neolithic building, enclosures and field systems of Late Bronze Age and Iron Age date, and a probable Saxon ‘boat-shaped’ building were of particular significance. The much smaller site at Howell’s Farm revealed a Bronze Age structure and part of an Iron Age settlement.
Full reference:
Wallis, S. and Waughman, M., 1998, Archaeology and the Landscape in the Lower Blackwater Valley, East Anglian Archaeology 82
A4, 246pp, 136fig, 12pls
ISBN 1 85281 160 9
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East Anglian Archaeology is an externally-funded project hosted by Norfolk County Council, based within the Historic Environment Service.
East Anglian Archaeology, Norfolk Historic Environment Service, Norfolk County Council, County Hall, Martineau Lane, Norwich NR1 2DH
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