File Name,Title,Abstract,Type,First Name,Last Name,Organisation,Page Count,Date Published,Publisher,Place Published,Volume/Issue/Report Number,ISBN,DOI,URL,Language,Software,Software Version Pottery_from_excavations_in_Derby_Road_Doveridge_CGCumberpatch.docx,"Pottery from excavations in Derby Road, Doveridge (205730-1)","A small assemblage of pottery from Derby Road, Doveridge was examined by the author on 26th May 2020. It consisted of ten sherds of pottery and a small piece of fired clay from four contexts. The data are summarised in Table 1. The area where the excavation took place lies outside the author?s area of competence and as such the suggestions and conclusions presented in the report should be considered to be provisional.",AUTHOR,Chris,Cumberpatch,,2,2020,Chris Cumberpatch,,,,,,English,Microsoft Word,365 205730_205_Conservation_Record.docx,Object Conservation Record,"Conservation record detailing the condition of the wood from context 205 prior to treatment, the treatment processes, the condition of the wood after treatment and recommendations for future storage and handling.",AUTHOR,Thomas,Wicks,Wessex Archaeology,2,2022,Wessex Archaeology,Salisbury,,,,,English,Microsoft Word,365 205731_Radiocarbon_Certificates.pdf,Radiocarbon Date Certificate,"Radiocarbon Date Certificate detailing the laboratory identification, date of measurement, material dated, pretreatment, mg Graphite and information about the radiocarbon calibration.",CREATOR,14CHRONO,Centre,,4,2019,14CHRONO Centre,Belfast,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205730_Doveridge_Security_Copy_PDFA-2u.pdf,"Land Off Derby Road, Doveridge, Archaeological Evaluation; Scanned primary Archive",Collated scanned site archive including all site records and drawings,CREATOR,Gwen,Naylor,Wessex Archaeology,73,2022,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205731_Doveridge_Security_Copy_PDFA-2u.pdf,"Land Off Derby Road, Doveridge Derbyshire, Archaeological Mitigation; Scanned Primary Archive",Collated scanned site archive including all site records and drawings,CREATOR,Gwen,Naylor,Wessex Archaeology,389,2022,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205730-2_Index_to_Archive.doc,Index to Archive,Paper archive index,CREATOR,Jess,Irwin,Wessex Archaeology,2,2022,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Microsoft Word,365 205731_Doveridge_Phytolith_Report.pdf,"Doveridge, Derbyshire, UK; Phytolith Analysis Report","Three samples from the archaeological site of Doveridge, an early Bronze Age settlement where an inverted cremation urn was discovered, were prepared for phytolith analysis. The investigations were commissioned Wessex Archaeology. The aim was to ascertain whether phytoliths were well preserved, and whether they suggest anthropogenic influence, any evidence for food or fuel and whether the results can help to understand Bronze Age cremation rituals. The results of the analysis show large number of well-preserved grass phytoliths, many originating from C3 pooideae grasses and C4 panicoideae grasses. Wheat and barley have been positively identified and probably oat and rye. The grass phytolith assemblage originated from both the grass leaves/stems and the inflorescence bracts. This could indicate that (1) the material deposited in this context was grown during spring or early summer and (2) that the material deposited was not separated from the other plant parts before deposition, or that multiple stages of crop processing are represented. The environmental conditions suggested by the phytoliths are a moist and wet growing environment in an open area. The phytoliths probably do not represent fuel remains as very few are burnt or mantled.",AUTHOR,S,Elliott,Quest Quaternary Scientific,32,2019,Quest Quaternary Scientific,Reading,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205730-2_Doveridge_Digital_Archive_Index.pdf,Doveridge Digital Archive Index,"Digital archive index listing all digital files, formats and descriptions.",CREATOR,Gwen,Naylor,Wessex Archaeology,8,2023,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205730_Land_off_Derby_Road_Doveridge_Derbyshire_Final_Report.pdf,"Land Off Derby Road, Doveridge Derbyshire, Archaeological Evaluation","Wessex Archaeology was commissioned by Lanpro Services, on behalf of Bellway Homes to undertake an archaeological evaluation of a c. 1.5 ha parcel of land located off Derby Road, Doveridge, Derbyshire DE6 5LA, centred on NGR 412290 334030. Desk-based assessment of the Site identified two historic assets within it: a demolished early 19thcentury building and medieval ridge and furrow. The structure was considered to be of negligible archaeological significance as it has been demolished and little is likely to survive below ground. The fossilised remains of medieval ridge and furrow visible in the fields of the Site are part of an extensive swathe of similar earthworks within the wider area. The evaluation comprised six trial trenches, measuring between 25 m in length and 40 m in length, targeted on known geophysical anomalies. One trench exposed three pits containing cremated bone (identifiable as human in two of the features) with one of the deposits representing the remains of an unurned burial. No datable material was found in any of the deposits, but their form is prehistoric in nature. The features correlate with a partial/irregular ring-shaped geophysical anomaly and a circular mound discernible within the LiDAR data, and would appear to indicate a small (c. 10 m-diameter) round barrow or other similar prehistoric funerary ringwork monument in this part of the Site. A linear cut feature lying to the south of the pits was examined, although due to the confines of the evaluation trench it was not possible to establish whether it formed part of ditch of the potential barrow, or merely a section of furrow base. Two large pits were also revealed. One contained medieval pottery and slag, and the other contained timbers and cattle remains. The pit with the medieval pottery and slag correlated with a pond-like anomaly detected by the geophysical survey, with the other pit lying approximately 5 m south of another pond-like anomaly, in this instance corroborated by historic mapping. A small assemblage of finds was recovered from the evaluation; six small, abraded sherds of medieval pottery (c. 12th?15th-century) were the earliest easily datable artefacts, and were found alongside 3.7 kg of slag characteristic of iron smithing, although these finds appeared to represent a dump of redeposited debris rather than in situ activity. There is little indication the Site contains deposits of high palaeoenvironmental significance, although the wood charcoal from the cremation pits could provide information on aspects of the funerary rite. Waterlogged remains were found in the samples from the pit in trench 2, although as that feature is undated their significance is reduced.",AUTHOR;,Hannah;,Dabill;,Wessex Archaeology;,44,2018,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Lorrain;,Higbee;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,In?s;,L?pez-D?riga;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Lorraine;,Mepham;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Jacqueline;,McKinley;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,ILLUSTATOR;,Ian;,Atkins;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, 205731_Doveridge_WSI.pdf,Written Scheme Of Investigation For Archaeological Evaluation Trenching; Land Off Derby Road Doveridge Derbyshire,"This Written Scheme of Investigation (WSI) has been prepared by Lanpro on behalf of Bellway Homes (the client) and details the methodology for undertaking a scheme of archaeological evaluation trenching of land off Derby Road, Doveridge, Derbyshire to inform a reserved matters application for residential development of the site.",AUTHOR,Paul,Gajos,Lanpro Services Ltd.,18,2018,Lanpro Services Ltd.,,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 205731_Land_off_Derby_Road_Doveridge_Derbyshire_Final_Report.pdf,"Land off Derby Road, Doveridge, Derbyshire; Post-excavation Assessment and Updated Project Design","Wessex Archaeology was commissioned by Lanpro Services Ltd., on behalf of Bellway Homes, to undertake archaeological mitigation works comprising a strip, map and record excavation on land off Derby Road, Doveridge, Derbyshire, DE6 5LA (NGR 412290 334030). The work was carried out as a condition of planning permission granted by Derbyshire Dales District Council for residential development. Three separate areas occupying 0.15 hectares in total were excavated. Area 1 contained the remains of a barrow. A complete ring ditch (1163) enclosed a 22 m diameter area that contained: the poorly preserved remains of the barrow mound (1166); an off-centre inner ring ditch that cut the barrow mound (1164); seven cremation burials (two urned and five unurned, spread across six graves) and a deposit of cremation-related debris. One of the cremation graves contained a complete inverted Early Bronze Age Collared Urn containing the remains of two children (<15 years old). There was also an east?west ditch (1165) alongside a scatter of undated discrete pits/postholes within the enclosed area. External to the complete ring ditch lay further pits and postholes, and field boundary ditches. Some of these appear post-medieval in date. Within Area 2 lay a large sub-circular feature of uncertain date that contained fragments of worked wood. The area also contained the probable continuation of a post-medieval ditch seen in Area 1, and the edge of an infilled pond shown on historic mapping. A circular large pit/small pond was exposed in Area 3; within its upper fill were quantities of slag alongside post-medieval pot. The finds assemblage comprises pottery, slag, wood, glass, clay tobacco pipe, worked flint and other stone objects. The near-pristine Bronze Age Collared Urn found with two undisturbed cremation burials is a rare find. Within the human remains from the site as a whole there is a high proportion of immature individuals to the near exclusion of adults. Further analysis of the human bone will provide more detailed demographic data and further information related to the mortuary rites. Numerous environmental samples were collected from a range of features; few charred plant remains were recovered from the grave deposits and other features of probable Bronze Age date. One sample could shed light on local plant processing activities, although some of the crop species from it suggest a medieval date. Further analysis of the wood charcoal from the cremation-related features could provide information on woodland management and species selection for funerary practices in the prehistoric period.",AUTHOR;,Simon;,Brown;,Wessex Archaeology;,80,2019,Wessex Archaeology,Sheffield,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 ,,,AUTHOR;,Patrick;,Daniel;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Lorraine;,Mepham;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Lynn;,Wootten;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,In?s;,L?pez-D?riga;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Erica;,Macey-Bracken;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Jacqueline;,McKinley;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,CONTRIBUTOR;,Liz;,Chambers;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,ILLUSTATOR;,Joanna;,Debska;,Wessex Archaeology;,,,,,,,,,,, 205730-1_Desk_Based_Assessment.pdf,"An Historic Environment Desk Based Assessment of Land to the East of Bakers Lane, Doveridge, Derbyshire","Archaeological Research Services Ltd was commissioned by Planning Design Practice Ltd to produce an historic environment desk-based assessment (DBA) of an area of land east of Bakers Lane, Doveridge, Derbyshire. This document has been prepared in advance of a planning application for c. 75 dwellings. The assessment identified two historic assets (an early 19th century structure and upstanding medieval ridge and furrow within the proposed development area which is considered to be of negligible archaeological significance as the structure has been demolished and little is likely to survive below ground. The potential for Bronze Age archaeological remains cannot be discounted as there is some slight evidence for Bronze Age activity within the wider study area. Given Doveridge?s riverine location and the presence of freely draining gravel terraces, Doveridge may have presented a potentially attractive location for prehistoric or medieval settlement and activity. The survival and significance of any hitherto unknown buried remains cannot be quantified or assessed without field evaluation. Archaeological remains from the later prehistoric periods are relatively scarce in the lowlands of Derbyshire. Although it has previously been noted that archaeological survey in areas of Derbyshire belonging to areas of the Mercian Mudstone geological group have been neglected and under-researched. The fields within the proposed development area contain the fossilised remains of medieval period ridge and furrow. These fields are part of an extensive series of fields within the wider study area which exhibit medieval ridge and furrow earthworks, indicating that the proposed development area was likely in use for cultivation during much of the medieval period but was subsequently utilised primarily as pasture. This assessment has identified that there is a medium-low potential for archaeological remains to survive within the PDA as buried features. Any unknown archaeological remains, pre-dating the medieval period, are likely to survive only as truncated features and so the significance of any such remains is likely to be no more than medium. It is recommended that discussions be undertaken by the Client or their representative with the Derbyshire County Council County Archaeologist to ascertain whether further archaeological evaluation works are necessary to accompany the planning application. If any such further works are required then this could take the form of a geophysical survey, targeted evaluation trenching or other targeted techniques. The hedgerows and ridge and furrow earthworks should be subject to appropriate archaeological survey prior to any groundworks commencing should planning consent be granted.",AUTHOR;,Joseph;,Tong;,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.;,40,2015,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.,Bakewell,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 ,,,EDITOR;,Clive;,Waddington;,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.;,,,,,,,,,,, 205730-1_Geophysical_Report.pdf,"Geophysical Survey of land to the East of Bakers Lane, Doveridge, Derbyshire","This report presents the results of a geophysical survey undertaken on land to the east of Bakers Lane, Doveridge in Derbyshire. An archaeological desk-based assessment (DBA) compiled in 2015 concluded that there is medium to low potential for archaeological remains to survive within the proposed development area. A geophysical survey was carried out between 21st and 24th April 2015 using a Bartington 601 dual sensor fluxgate gradiometer. Approximately 4.5ha. was included in the survey. The results have not revealed any definite evidence of any previously unknown significant sub-surface archaeological remains within the survey area although a small number of anomalies with some potential to be of archaeological origin have been identified. The geophysical survey also confirmed that large parts of the survey area appear to be devoid of detectable archaeological features other than surviving remains that are agricultural in origin and which possess historical value of negligible significance. Vague traces of the upstanding medieval ridge and furrow appear in the data and these suggest that in the northern field the ridge and furrow follows two alignments and is therefore, possibly, multi- phase. As the anomalies associated with the medieval ridge and furrow are vague in the dataset or have been removed at the data processing stage the results suggest that it is unlikely that any archaeological features have been masked by the ridge and furrow.",AUTHOR;,Richard;,Durkin;,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.;,26,2015,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.,Bakewell,,,,,English,Adobe Acrobat Pro,365 ,,,EDITOR;,Clive;,Waddington;,Archaeological Research Services Ltd.;,,,,,,,,,,,