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Series: Comm Rescue Archaeol Avon Gloucestershire Somerset Occas Pap
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A Romano-British settlement at Cattybrook, Almondsbury, Avon
Julian Bennett
ST 593834. A small RB farmstead had at least two structural phases, late 1st to early 3rd century. Numerous features provided one of the largest and most comprehensive pottery assemblages from the region. Au(abr)
1980
Clay tobacco pipes in Gloucestershire
Allan Peacey
Presents a typology for Gloucestershire pipes from 1600 to 1870, gives a list of pipe makers, illustrates marked pipes, and maps the distribution of the local pipes and their principal competitors (eg Broseley). Appendices treat the kiln from Westgate Street, Gloucester, and the makers of Wickwar.
1979
Excavations at Guiting Power Iron Age site, Gloucestershire, 1974
Alan Saville
SP 089250. Reports the excavation of a cluster of twenty rock-cut pits, including a stone-lined one about 2.6m across, and an associated collection of artefacts and animal remains. The pits, which are too shallow for grain storage, may be associated with an adjacent rectangular ditched enclosure found by magnetometer survey. Pottery is of the pre-Belgic type for the region. Butchery practices evident from the bones are noted.
1979
Newent glasshouse: a late 16th century and 17th century glasshouse and late 17th century and 18th century pottery
Alan G Vince
Field levelling operations brought to the surface a quantity of glass (pushed-in beaker bases, beakers with applied milled footrim, jugs and bowls, linen smoothers etc) of a glasshouse recorded from 1598 to 1638, the concern of Tyzack and other French workers. Distribution of the products was on a fairly small scale. The glasshouse was demolished by 1707, but by then potters were on the site; six of them operated from c 1676 to c 1750, also marketing on a small scale.
1977
Recent work at Cow Common Bronze Age cemetery, Gloucestershire
Alan Saville
SP 135262. Describes the excavation of a ploughed-out Cotswold round barrow, Swell 8, of which little remained but the unaccompanied primary cremation in a pit. This pit was overlain by burnt timbers yielding 14C dates not earlier than 15th century bc. Flint artefacts, including a large surface collection from the area, and a fragmentary bronze blade (also a surface find) are discussed in detail and the site as a whole is set within its Cotswold Bronze Age context. Excavation strategy on such severely damaged sites is also discussed.
1979
The Wincanton Bypass (A303 Trunk Road Scheme): a study in the archaeological recording of road works
Ann Ellison
Terence Pearson
1981
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