Archive for the 'Announcements' Category

Geophysical surveys from Wessex Archaeology

Example output and interpretation from one of our geophysical surveysWessex Archaeology has been doing geophysical surveys in-house, mainly for Coastal and Marine projects but also terrestrial ones, since 2004. After being asked many times if this service could be made available more widely, we have decided to do just that.

Lead by Paul Baggaley, we have a team of 6 expert geophysicists, and we are able to put three teams in the field. We can provide all the usual survey methods, magnetic gradiometry, magnetic scanning and resistivity, plus advice on all other techniques such as Ground Penetrating Radar or Seismic survey.

Find out more about our geophysics capabilities in our Commercial Services section or call either Paul Baggaley or John Dillon on +44(0)1722 326867.

Geophysical survey

Training Dig 2008: Practical Archaeology Training Course

For the last four years, Wessex Archaeology has run a series of very successful five day courses at Dr Martin Green’s farm on Cranborne Chase, “one of the most carefully studied areas in western Europe”. The Down Farm landscape includes parts of the Dorset Cursus and Ackling Dyke, Bronze Age barrows and Roman and Iron Age buildings. It is a rich, multi-period site in a wonderful setting.

Training dig 2007

The course will include instruction and practice in site surveying, excavation, recording (the production of both written records and scale drawings) and finds processing.

It runs from September 1st - 5th and 8th - 12th 2008. More details can be found in our training section.

Chief Executive Awarded OBE

Sue Davies OBEA ‘delighted’ Sue Davies, Chief Executive of Wessex Archaeology, was awarded the OBE in the New Years Honours List for Services to Heritage.

Sue’s fascination with discovering things goes back to her childhood. Born in Wales, her father had studied in archaeology, so family outings involved trips to Hadrian’s Wall and Stonehenge, and she started going on digs during the school holidays. Her long association with Wessex started when she studied archaeology at Southampton and, apart from a few years working on a UNESCO-funded project on Carthage, she has worked here ever since.

While she was at Southampton, Sue helped local archaeologists from Andover and Romsey at the weekends and when local charity Wessex Archaeology was set up in 1979 she was one of the first employees. She led a series of excavations across the region including major projects as Dorchester town centre was redeveloped and started what has turned out to be a long running involvement in the attempts to find a solution for Stonehenge.

Sue became Chief Executive in 2003 but as well as building up the company to the point where it has a staff of over 200, she has served on various organisations that have helped establish the young and emerging profession of archaeology. She served as the Chair on the Institute of Field Archaeologists, who made her an Honorary Life Member in 2005, and she is currently the Chair of the Culture Committee for the UK National Commission for UNESCO which advises the government on matters relating to culture and world heritage, work which takes her to Paris and Brussels.

Commenting on the honour, Sue said ‘I am really pleased, but this isn’t about what I have done. It is about the work of all my colleagues who have helped establish archaeology as something that matters to people. People value their past. Discovering things is exciting, but you have to have a good team and good system. Over the last 25 years we have gone a long way to building, right across the UK, one of the best heritage systems in Europe.’

Local MP Robert Key who serves on the Board of Directors of Wessex Archaeology and speaks up for archaeology at Westminster said ‘I am thrilled for Sue. Like her, I was fascinated by archaeology when I was a child. My career took a different path, but I am proud that one of the top archaeological organisations in Europe is based in Salisbury. I know from first hand experience that Sue’s honour is thoroughly deserved.’

Anchors Aweigh! New scheme to promote South West’s Marine Heritage

Wessex Archaeology has just launched a new project to promote the region’s marine heritage. This has been made possible by a £50,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF). Archaeologists are inviting the public to join them to Time Travel by Water into the past on a voyage of discovery.

The project aims to bring school children and community groups across Wiltshire, Dorset, Somerset and Gloucestershire right up to date with the new ways marine heritage is being explored and some of the amazing new discoveries.

Time Team TV celebrity Phil Harding, whose ‘day job’ is with Wessex Archaeology said ‘I am excited by this project. Most people think of marine history as being about galleons and doubloons. That part of seafaring history is important, but an amazing range of other work is being done: on wrecks, in harbours, and all along the coast. Some of the most hi-tech kit you will ever see on an archaeological project is the scientific survey gear marine archaeologists use. Now you don’t need to get your feet wet to see below the sea.’

In the two-year project, archaeologists will create time travel learning packs that can be used in classrooms and on the web, but a big element will be visiting community groups and schools so that they too can travel back in time. A new Education and Outreach Officer will organise themed exhibitions for those audiences, as well as lectures to local societies.

Euan McNeill, who is leading the project, commented, ‘In the last few years there has been an upsurge in the amount of work done on marine archaeology. This ranges from surveying the submerged landscapes that Britain’s first pre-historic settlers walked on; to WWII aircraft crash sites. Great historical events like the Armada are famous, but the sea has always been important in the South West and has helped shape its history. Linked inland by rivers, canals, roads and railways, the influence of the sea is never far away. This project allows everyone to time travel with us and we are delighted that the Heritage Lottery Fund is supporting this project.’

Nerys Watts, HLF Regional Manager adds ‘Over the centuries, Britain’s seafaring has helped shape our diverse society today. Many journeys that became globally significant set sail from the South West and so the HLF is pleased to support Time Travelling by Water. As more and more people appreciate just how significant their heritage is, it helps to make sure that we can preserve it and pass it on for future generations to enjoy.’

For further information contact:

Euan McNeill
Wessex Archaeology
Portway house
Salisbury SP4 6EB
Tel: 01722 326867
e.mcneill@wessexarch.co.uk

The ss Great Britain

Brunel’s ss Great BritainWhen she was launched in 1843 the ss Great Britain was the largest ship in the world and the first screw-propelled, ocean-going, wrought iron ship.

Designed by the famous engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the ss Great Britain was built for the luxury passenger trade between Britain and America. She could carry 252 first and second class passengers and 130 crew. Her first career lasted for 94 years. In this time she sailed round the world many times; and in many roles.

Her career as a transatlantic liner was cut short by accident. After this she was converted to a clipper taking emigrants to Australia, before serving as a troop ship in both the Crimean War and the Indian Mutiny. She then became a cargo ship and, finally, a coal store in the Falkland Islands where she was scuttled in 1937.

In 1970 she was made seaworthy and towed back to Bristol where she was painstakingly conserved and transformed into the centre piece of a museum. Today the ss Great Britain is seen an icon of innovation in the heyday of the British Empire

The Great Western steam factory

The home of the ss Great Britain today is where she was built between 1839 and 1843; the Great Western Dockyard. Excavations ahead of the creation of the new Brunel Institute Conservation and Learning Centre provide an opportunity to discover about the world’s first purpose-built integrated iron steamship works.

The Great Western Steamship Company bought the site in 1839 and built the dry dock and the large Steamship Engine Works. The excavations are on the site of the Engine Works.

While the revolutionary iron hull of the ss Great Britain was taking shape in the dry dock, her enormous engine and transmission gear were made in the Engine Works. Nothing as large or powerful had been built before and the machinery in this building represented cutting edge technology.

Brunel had wanted to contract out the building of the engine, but the directors of the Great Western Steamship Company overruled him, stressing the advantages of fitting the boilers and machinery on the ship before floating her out of the dry dock. They intended to make money refitting and repairing other ships after the ss Great Britain was launched.

The Steam Factory was built on a monumental scale to accommodate the massive machinery required to construct the ship’s massive engine, propeller and transmission. It was an impressive building and in February 1840, the Mechanics Magazine referred to the “most excellent erecting shops fitted up for the engines with foundry, cranes and other conveniences”.

The archaeology of construction

Although we have information about some of the machinery installed in the Engine Works, we know little about how it was set up. Heavy plant was located on the ground floor, as was the smithy and foundry.

Pattern making and light turning operations could be carried out on the upper floors. The investigations will tell us more about what took place on the ground floor of the factory.

The three stacks visible in the photograph probably indicate the locations of the smithery, foundry and boilers to drive the machinery.

The Great Western Steamship Company was officially wound up in 1852 and the factory was sold to the Great Western Tannery. Tanning, the turning of animal hides into leather is a long and complex process which involves many stages. It involves soaking animal hides in pits that contain different liquids for several weeks. At the Great Western tannery, large vats were built on the ground floor of the Engine Works and a new, raised, floor was built around the top of the vats, tuning them into pits.

The building was extensively damaged in the air raids of winter 1940/41

Later the site was used as a timber yard, a granary, and then a warehouse during the Second World War the building was badly damaged in an air raid by the Luftwaffe in 1941. It carried the scars from this until most of it was demolished down to the level of the floor of the tanner. Below this, though, the tannery pits survive and they rest on the floor of the Engine Works. A few of the original walls also survive and they will incorporated into the new Brunel Centre.

Link: Visit the official website of the ss Great Britain

Blogging and digging

Staff running our 2007 practical archaeology course will be blogging about the dig each day for the next 2 weeks.

Visit our events blog to follow the course, or subscribe to the events blog RSS feed to keep up to date with the latest news from the course at Cranborne Chase in Dorset, UK.

Hoes at the ready!

Extra places on archaeology course

Due to the many requests we have had for bookings on the 2007 Practical Archaeology Course at Down Farm, Cranborne Chase, we have released 8 more places.

Book now to avoid disappointment!

Find out more at the Practical Archaeology Course 2007 homepage.

Archaeology at Heathrow Terminal 5

The Archaeology at Heathrow T5 website has been launched today by Framework Archaeology. It allows you to follow the story of the site, from the distant forests of the old stone age, to the ultra-modern
terminal buildings of today. 3D visualisations and animations show how we think it may have looked, and how people might have lived.

Archaeology at Heathrow T5 websiteFor those wanting more detailed information, we have provided a suite of specialist reports for download, and a discussion about the different landscapes that evolved through time. Those who wish to find out exactly what was found, and where, can download our custom-built GIS, called the
“Framework Freeviewer” and digitally dig into the site.

Archaeology at Heathrow T5 also provides RSS feeds for those who wish to subscribe to the site and keep track of any changes or new information.

Archaeology at Heathrow T5 was funded by BAA.

About Framework Archaeology
Framework Archaeology is a joint venture of Wessex Archaeology and Oxford Archaeology set up to work at BAA airports. Since 1998 we have undertaken large excavations at Heathrow Terminal 5 and Stansted. In addition we have carried out archaeological evaluations and smaller excavations at Gatwick, Southampton and Edinburgh airports.

Using our photographs

We like to see people using our photos. We post photos of our projects to Flickr, a thriving online photographic community. Many people have begun to use these photos on their own websites, desktop backgrounds and even in screensavers.

Images of the past are always fascinating, be they photographs of fabulous ancient treasures, or muddy trenches full of broken medieval pottery.

Creative Commons logo

To actively encourage non-commercial use of our photographs, we have adopted a Creative Commons “Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0” license for all of our photos hosted on Flickr, and those in our own gallery (which are in fact, one and the same).

What does this mean?
It means that if you see these logos near one of our photos: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0

You are free:

  • to Share: to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to Remix: to adapt the work

Under the following conditions:

  • Attribution: You must attribute the work to Wessex Archaeology, and where possible provide a hyperlink to the URL of the original work or www.wessexarch.co.uk (but not in any way that suggests that we endorse you or your use of the work).
  • Noncommercial: You may not use this work for commercial purposes.
  • Share Alike: If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.

If you are in any doubt on how you can use the photos, please check the text of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 license.

Roman Dorchester 23aBe Creative
Put your favourite Wessex Archaeology photos on your own website, or even paint your favourite artefact (or skeleton)! Please link back to the photo page on Flickr (as per their community guidelines) or gallery/project page if copied directly from our website - this will help people to find our more about the context of the photo.

Why?
We hope that more widespread use of our photographs will encourage more people to learn about, or take an interest in, archaeology and history. We believe that adopting a Creative Commons license will help us to achieve this, and remove any doubt about how and where our images may be used.

What do I do if I want to use one of your photos commercially?
You should email info@wessexarch.co.uk with the URL of the photograph, and provide us with information about how and where the image will be used. We will get in touch with you to discuss further arrangements.

Practical Archaeology Course 2007

Practical Archaeology Training Course at Down Farm, Sixpenny Handley

September 3rd-7th and 10th-14th 2007

Following the success of the last three years, these five day courses will take place at Martin Green’s farm on Cranborne Chase “one of the most carefully studied areas in western Europe”. The Down Farm landscape includes parts of the Dorset Cursus and Ackling Dyke, Bronze Age barrows and Roman and Iron Age buildings. It is a rich, multi-period site in a wonderful setting.

The course will include instruction and practice in site surveying, excavation, recording (the production of both written records and scale drawings) and finds processing.

Find out more about the course, and details about how to sign up.