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Dedicated to research into the Landscape Archaeology of Eastern Yorkshire
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The
Heslerton Parish Project
Morphology
and Landscape The
parish morphology both to the north and south of the River Derwent in the centre
of the Vale shows a remarkable uniformity, and although those parishes to the
north of the river are quite different to those to the south, incorporating a
far larger upland component, in both cases they seem to reflect economically
viable and roughly equal areas of the two different principal ecological
resources from the lowland and upland areas. Only Yedingham, a monastic parish
supported by revenues generated from the river crossing and lands situated
beyond the parish, and perhaps from barge traffic on the River Derwent, does not
conform to this pattern. Yedingham was the highest navigable point on the river
during the nineteenth century, although little is known about the state and use
of the river in earlier periods. Although
the choice of Heslerton as the focus for a long term landscape research project
was reactive rather than pro-active, attention being focussed on the area
following the discovery of the Anglian cemetery during mineral extraction, its
central location along the southern side of the Vale of Pickering and an
examination of the parish morphology (Fig. 1) and geomorphology (Fig. 2) across
the Wolds-Vale interface indicated that the area could form a good
representative sample for a much more extensive landscape, a landscape that
spanned physical as well as ecological zones perfectly suited for human
occupation.
The
Heslerton Parish Project utilised a landscape transect (Fig. 3) to provide a
theoretical and visual mechanism for encapsulating the evidence across the
project research area. The transect provided a simple mechanism for presenting
the combined evidence of geomorphology, topography and archaeology. By bringing
together evidence form a 10km. wide swath extending to either side of the
transect line a schematic view of the landscape could be constructed reflecting
both land-use and, with respect to some activities, period as well.
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Copyright © 2006 The Landscape Research Centre Ltd. Registered Charity No. 326710 All rights reserved.
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