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Imperial College Sports Grounds and RMC Land, Harlington [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 250 pages
  • Sērija : Wessex Archaeology Reports 33
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jan-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Trust for Wessex Archaeology Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1874350744
  • ISBN-13: 9781874350743
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 250 pages
  • Sērija : Wessex Archaeology Reports 33
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Jan-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Trust for Wessex Archaeology Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1874350744
  • ISBN-13: 9781874350743
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Excavations in the London Borough of Hillingdon revealed a rich archaeological landscape with possible settlement continuity and shift over a period of 6000 years. Evidence for important Neolithic monuments and contemporary cremation burials, extensive Bronze Age field systems, as well as Iron Age, Romano-British and Saxon remains was revealed.

This volume brings together the results from the excavations at the former Imperial College Sports Ground, RMC Land and Land East of Wall Garden Farm, near the villages of Harlington and Sipson in the London Borough of Hillingdon. The excavations revealed parts of an archaeological landscape with a rich history of development from before 4000 BC to the post-medieval period. The opportunity to investigate two large areas of this landscape provided evidence for possible settlement continuity and shift over a period of 6000 years. Early to Middle Neolithic occupation was represented by a rectangular ditched mortuary enclosure and a large spread of pits, many containing deposits of Peterborough Ware pottery, flint and charred plant remains. A possible dispersed monument complex of three hengiform enclosures was associated with the rare remains of cremation burials radiocarbon dated to the Middle Neolithic. Limited Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age activity was identified, which is in stark contrast to the Middle to Late Bronze Age when a formalised landscape of extensive rectangular fields, enclosures, wells and pits was established. This major reorganised land division can be traced across the two sites and over large parts of the adjacent Heathrow terraces. A small, Iron Age and Romano-British nucleated settlement was constructed, with associated enclosures flanking a trackway. There were wayside inhumations, cremation burials and middens and more widely dispersed wells and quarries. Two possible sunken-featured buildings of early Saxon date were found. There was also a small cemetery. Subsequently, a middle Saxon and medieval field system of small enclosures and wells was established.
List of Figures
viii
List of Plates
x
List of Tables
xi
Foreword xiii
Acknowledgements xiv
Abstract xv
Foreign language summaries xvi
Chapter 1 Introduction
Alistair J. Barclay
Andrew B. Powell
Chris J. Stevens
Philippa Bradley
Background to the project
1(3)
ICSG
1(1)
RMC Land
1(1)
Land East of Wall Garden Farm
1(3)
Site location, topography and geology
4(1)
Methods
4(1)
Excavation Areas and context numbering
4(1)
Field methods
4(1)
Topographic analysis
5(1)
Archaeological background
5(5)
Pre-Neolithic
6(1)
Neolithic to Early Bronze Age
6(1)
Middle--Late Bronze Age and Iron Age
7(1)
Romano-British to medieval
8(2)
Post-medieval and modern
10(1)
Project research themes
10(1)
Radiocarbon dating
11(1)
Location of archives
11(2)
Chapter 2 Hunters, Herders And First Farmers
Alistair J. Barclay
Andrew B. Powell
Chris J. Stevens
Philippa Bradley
Introduction
13(3)
Environment and landscape
15(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Economy
15(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Pre-Neolithic
16(1)
Early Neolithic
16(4)
Feature G2004
16(3)
Tree-throw holes
19(1)
Early to Middle Neolithic
20(27)
Introduction
20(1)
Monuments
20(13)
Pits
33(14)
Late Neolithic
47(1)
Beaker and Early Bronze Age
47(4)
Mortuary activity
47(3)
Feature G288
50(1)
Chapter 3 Settling The Land: From Monuments To Fields -- Middle Bronze Age And Late Bronze Age--Early Iron Age
Andrew B. Powell
Chris J. Stevens
Introduction
51(2)
Environment and landscape
52(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Later prehistoric field system
53(6)
Date
54(4)
Orientation
58(1)
Fields -- form and structure
58(1)
Trackways
59(1)
Possible enclosure ditch
59(1)
Middle Bronze Age settlement
59(5)
ICSG
61(2)
RMC Land
63(1)
Middle Bronze Age burials
64(3)
Cremation cemetery
64(3)
Other Middle Bronze Age burials
67(1)
Late Bronze Age--Early Iron Age settlement
67(11)
ICSG
67(6)
RMC Land
73(5)
Late Bronze Age--Early Iron Age burials
78(1)
Economy
78(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Discussion
79(4)
Chapter 4 Open Settlment And Trackside Enclosures: Iron Age And Romano-British
Andrew B. Powell
Chris J. Stevens
Introduction
83(2)
Environment and landscape
85(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Middle and Late Iron Age
85(4)
ICSG
85(4)
RMC Land
89(1)
Romano-British
89(16)
ICSG
89(14)
RMC Land
103(2)
Economy
105(1)
Chris J. Stevens
Discussion
105(4)
Change in the Iron Age
105(1)
Continuity into the Romano-British period
106(3)
Chapter 5 Farmsteads And Fields: The Saxon To Medieval Evidence
Lorraine Mepham
Chris J. Stevens
Introduction
109(1)
The historical background
110(1)
Early Saxon
110(1)
Middle Saxon
110(1)
Late Saxon and early medieval
111(1)
The Chronological evidence
111(1)
Pottery
111(1)
Other finds
112(1)
Radiocarbon dating
112(1)
Field system at RMC Land
112(7)
Enclosure 1 (1202)
113(1)
Truncation by east--west ditches (1205--7)
113(1)
Second east--west ditch (1214)
113(1)
Recut of enclosure 1 (1211/4043)
114(1)
Enclosure 2 (1203/1212/1710)
114(1)
Southern droveway ditches
114(1)
Northern droveway ditches
115(1)
Enclosure 3
115(1)
Fields 1--3
115(1)
Eastern section: enclosure 4 and fields 4 and 5
116(1)
Fields 6--9
117(2)
Field system at ICSG
119(1)
Structures
119(4)
Possible sunken-featured buildings (SFBs)
119(1)
Post-built structures
119(2)
Fencelines
121(2)
Pits
123(4)
Pits at RMC Land
123(4)
Pits and postholes at ICSG
127(1)
Waterholes
127(6)
Waterholes at RMC Land
127(5)
Waterholes at ICSG
132(1)
Funerary activity at RMC Land
133(6)
Grave 4662
133(3)
Grave 4707
136(1)
Grave 4720
137(1)
Possible graves 4713 and 4717
138(1)
Other possible graves at RMC Land
138(1)
Other features
139(1)
Late medieval and post-medieval development
139(1)
Discussion
140(5)
Early Saxon settlement
140(1)
Early Saxon funerary evidence
140(1)
Middle Saxon to medieval activity
141(1)
Finds deposition and site formation processes
142(1)
Environment and economy
142(3)
Chris J. Stevens
Chapter 6 Pottery And Fired Clay
Prehistoric pottery
145(14)
Matt Leivers
Methods
145(1)
Dating
145(1)
Context
146(1)
Pottery by chronological period
146(11)
Appendix 1 Fabric descriptions
157(2)
Later prehistoric and Romano-British pottery
159(9)
Rachael Seager Smith
Middle to Late Iron Age
160(1)
Latest Iron Age/Romano-British
161(3)
Late Iron Age and early Romano-British
164(1)
Later Romano-British
165(1)
Discussion
166(2)
Post-Roman pottery
168(8)
Lorraine Mepham
Introduction
168(1)
Early Saxon
169(1)
Middle Saxon
170(1)
Late Saxon/medieval
171(2)
Chronology
173(1)
Discussion
174(2)
Fired clay
176(4)
Kayt Brown
Lorraine Mepham
Spindle whorl
176(1)
Loomweights
177(2)
Crucible
179(1)
Perforated clay slabs
179(1)
Ceramic building material
180(1)
Kayt Brown
Chapter 7 Worked Flint And Worked Stone
Worked Flint
181(21)
Philippa Bradley
Introduction
181(2)
Palaeolithic
183(1)
Mesolithic
183(1)
Neolithic
183(8)
Bronze Age
191(3)
Discussion
194(8)
Worked Stone
202(7)
Grace Perpetua Jones
Querns
202(1)
Smaller grinding stones
203(1)
Rubbers/pounders/grinders
203(1)
Whetstones
203(1)
Hammerstones
204(1)
Slingstone
204(1)
Polishing stones
204(1)
Building stone
204(1)
Other worked stone
204(1)
Pebbles and unworked stone fragments
205(1)
Discussion
205(4)
Chapter 8 Other Finds
Coins and tokens
209(1)
Nicholas Cooke
Roman
209(1)
Saxon
209(1)
Post-medieval and modern
209(1)
Metal objects
210(6)
Lorraine Mepham
Rachael Seager Smith
Silver
210(1)
Lorraine Mepham
Copper alloy
210(1)
Rachael Seager Smith
Lorraine Mepham
Iron
211(5)
Rachael Seager Smith
Lorraine Mepham
Thomas Kind
Jorn Schuster
Metalworking debris
216(1)
Phil Andrews
Glass and amber beads
216(2)
Lorraine Mepham
Beads from Saxon graves
216(2)
Beads from non-mortuary contexts
218(1)
Worked bone
218(1)
Lorraine Mepham
Objects of worked wood
219(4)
Lorraine Mepham
Structural timbers
219(1)
Bucket
219(2)
Log ladder
221(1)
?Lid or vessel base
222(1)
Chapter 9 Human Bone And Animal Bone
Human bone
223(10)
Jacqueline I. McKinley
Introduction
223(2)
Methods
225(1)
Results and discussion
225(8)
Animal bone
233(8)
J. M. Grimm
Introduction
233(1)
Taphonomy
234(1)
Prehistoric
235(2)
Late Iron Age/Romano-British
237(1)
Early Saxon
238(1)
Late Saxon/early medieval
239(2)
Chapter 10 Environmental Remains
Charred and waterlogged plant remains
241(28)
Chris J. Stevens
Methods
241(13)
Charred plant remains
254(8)
Waterlogged plant remains
262(7)
Wood charcoal
269(7)
Dana Challinor
Introduction
269(1)
Methods
269(1)
Notes on identifications
269(2)
Neolithic
271(1)
Bronze Age
272(2)
Romano-British
274(1)
Saxon
274(1)
Saxo-Norman
275(1)
Medieval
275(1)
Conclusion
276(1)
Insect remains
276(7)
David Smith
Background
276(5)
Methods
281(1)
Results
281(1)
Discussion
281(2)
Conclusions
283(1)
Pollen
283(10)
Michael J. Grant
Introduction
283(1)
Methods
283(4)
Results
287(1)
Interpretation and discussion
287(5)
Conclusion
292(1)
Sediments
293(2)
David Norcott
Ditches
293(1)
Waterholes
293(1)
Wells
293(2)
Chapter 11 Chronology And The Radiocarbon Dating Programme
Alistair J. Barclay
Chris J. Stevens
Introduction
295(2)
Sample selection
295(1)
Results and calibration
295(1)
Objectives
296(1)
Results
297(5)
Neolithic and Early Bronze Age
297(1)
Early Bronze Age
298(2)
Later Bronze Age and Iron Age
300(2)
Romano-British
302(1)
Saxon and medieval
302(1)
Conclusion
302(1)
Chapter 12 Overview
Alistair J. Barclay
Andrew B. Powell
Lorraine Mepham
Introduction: the long view
303(1)
Neolithic to Early Bronze Age
303(1)
Alistair J. Barclay
Middle Bronze Age to Romano-British period
304(2)
Andrew B. Powell
Saxon and medieval periods
306(3)
Lorraine Mepham
Bibliography 309(18)
Index 327