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Current Archaeol 13 (2)
Title
The title of the publication or report
Title:
Current Archaeol 13 (2)
Series
The series the publication or report is included in
Series:
Current Archaeology
Volume
Volume number and part
Volume:
13 (2)
Publication Type
The type of publication - report, monograph, journal article or chapter from a book
Publication Type:
Journal
Year of Publication
The year the book, article or report was published
Year of Publication:
1996
Note
Extra information on the publication or report.
Note:
Date Of Issue From: 1996
Source
Where the record has come from or which dataset it was orginally included in.
Source:
BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
Created Date
The date the record of the pubication was first entered
Created Date:
20 Jan 2002
Please click on an Article link to go to the Article Details.
Article Title
Access Type
Author / Editor
Page
Start/End
Abstract
Lockington
Gwilym Hughes
44 - 49
Description of the excavation of Bronze Age burial mounds and the find of a remarkable group of artefacts including gold armlets and a copper dagger.
Diary
50 - 51
Items on the publication of The Roman Inscriptions of Britain, volume 2; the work of the British School at Rome at San Vincenzo; Current Archaeology and the Royal Commission's addresses on the world wide web; the Scottish Cultural Resources Access Network; a Windows-based SMR system designed for South Yorkshire and a list of events and lectures.
The story of the Buckskin barrow
Michael J Allen
Barbara Applin
52 - 56
Excavation of a barrow site near Basingstoke. Environmental work (including considerable work on snails) has only now been completed, excavation having finished in 1967. A period of bonfire lighting and feasting appears to have taken place within the ring barrow, before the whole structure was mounded over. There is a video describing the project.
Piddington
57 - 64
Excavation of a large courtyard villa shows that it was rebuilt at the end of the third century, before being divided into a number of smaller units in the fourth. The settlement has Iron Age antecedents and was used as a cemetery in the early medieval period.
Science diary
John Musty
65 - 67
Notes on early metal production; mummification; baby dinosaurs; hominines and hominids; comet impact craters; Soay sheep; the recovery of medieval grain from thatched roofs; Roman porphyry quarries and temperature cycles.
Eccles
Tim Pestell
68 - 69
Unusually low tides in March 1986 revealed traces of village which had been engulfed by the sea in the seventeenth century. Recording work has continued on this site whenever tidal conditions permit.
Stonehenge
James F Dyer
71 - 72
Summary of the phases of building activity. This is based on an analysis of all the twentieth-century excavations here from those of Gowland in 1901 to those of R J C Atkinson in the 1970s. The main phases are acknowledged: the first monument (2950 to 2900 BC), the timber settings (2900 to 2400 BC) and stone settings (2500 to 1600 BC).
Llandough
Alan Thomas
Neil Holbrook
73 - 77
A Late Roman and early medieval cemetery of 858 burials is discussed. It is possible that the cemetery was associated with a nearby monastery and/or with the important site of Dinas Powys.