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Dedicated to research into the Landscape Archaeology of Eastern Yorkshire
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| the mapping of a range of major prehistoric features including a number of round barrows, a large 'hengiform' enclosure, a possible long barrow, one or possibly more cursus monuments and a range of major prehistoric landscape boundaries. | |
| the discovery of the 'Barrowlet', very small ring ditches which probably marked cremation burials of the Late Iron Age and Roma periods, as a new class of monument, in this region. | |
| the mapping of 3.5km of Late Iron Age and Roman 'ladder settlement' comprising farmsteads, field systems and cemeteries | |
| the discovery of a large Early Anglo-Saxon or Anglian settlement and the realisation that there were also other smaller clusters of Grubenhäuser, the cavity-floor buildings that are characteristic of Early and Middle Saxon settlement. In combination with Project 3409 where further clusters of Grubenhäuser have been identified at regular intervals this evidence reveals a more densely settled and utilised landscape than anyone could have predicted. It has tremendous implications for our interpretation of Early Anglo-Saxon England. |
These surveys reveal an intensity of human settlement from the Neolithic to Mediaeval periods that is unparalleled. They also alert us to the fragility of this past evidence and the threat posed by mineral extraction and intensive agriculture; however they do provide us with a base data set that can be used to develop sustainability through long term land management strategies.
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Copyright © 2006 The Landscape Research Centre Ltd. Registered Charity No. 326710 All rights reserved.
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