Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T23:23:09.876Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Making time work: sampling floodplain artefact frequencies and populations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2015

Christopher Evans
Affiliation:
Cambridge Archaeological Unit, Department of Archaeology, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK
Jonathan Tabor
Affiliation:
Cambridge Archaeological Unit, Department of Archaeology, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3DZ, UK
Marc Vander Linden
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31–34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, UK

Abstract

The expansion of large-scale excavation in Britain and parts of Continental Europe, funded by major development projects, has generated extensive new datasets. But what might we be losing when surfaces are routinely stripped by machines? Investigation by hand of ploughsoils and buried soils in the Fenlands of eastern England reveals high densities of artefacts and features that would often be destroyed or overlooked. These investigations throw new light on the concept of site sequences where features cut into underlying ground may give only a limited and misleading indication of the pattern and timing of prehistoric occupation. The consequential loss of data has a particular impact on estimates of settlement density and population numbers, which may have been much higher than many current estimates envisage.

Type
Method
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Atkinson, R. J.C. 1972. Burial and population in the British Bronze Age, in Lynch, F. & Burgess, C. (ed.) Prehistoric man in Wales and the West. 107-16. Bath: Adams and Dart.Google Scholar
Bloch, M. 1998. Why trees, too, are good to think with: towards an anthropology of the meaning of life, in Rival, L. (ed.) The social life of trees: anthropological perspectives on tree symbolism: 3955. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Boismier, W. 1997. Modelling the effects of tillage on artefact distributions in theploughzone: a simulation studyoftillage-inducedpattern formation (British Archaeological Reports British series 259). Oxford: Archaeopress.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Champion, T. 1978. Strategies for sampling a Saxon settlement: a retrospective view of Chalton, in Cherry, J. F., Gamble, C. & Shennan, S. (ed.) Sampling in contemporary British archaeology (British Archaeological Reports British series 50): 207-25. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Chapman, J.C. & Gaydarska, B. I.. 2007. Parts and wholes: fragmentation in prehistoric context. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D., Godwin, M. E. & Clifford, M. H.. 1935. Report on recent excavations at Peacock's Farm, Shippea Hill, Cambridgeshire. Antiquaries Journal 15:284319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003581500048022 Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D., Higgs, E. S. & Longworth, I. H.. 1960. Excavations at the Neolithic site at Hurst Fen, Mildenhall, Suffolk, 1954, 1957and1958. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 26:202-45.Google Scholar
Clarke, D. L. (ed.). 1972. Models in archaeology. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Cooper, A. & Edmonds, M.. 2007. Past and present-excavations at Broom, Bedfordshire 1996-2005. Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit.Google Scholar
Crowther, D. 1983. Old land surfaces and modern ploughsoil: implications of recent work at Maxey, Cambs. Scottish Archaeological Review 2:3144.Google Scholar
Edmonds, M., Evans, C. & Gibson, D.. 1999. Assembly and collection—lithic complexes in the Cambridgeshire fenlands. Proceedings ofthe Prehistoric Society 65:4787.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2000a. Testing the ground—sampling strategies, in Crowson, A., Lane, T. & Reeve, J. (ed.) The Fenland Management Project: excavations 1991-1995 (Lincolnshire Archaeology and Heritage Reports 3): 1521. Heckington: Lincolnshire Heritage.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2000b. Archaeological distributions: the problem with dots, in Kirby, T. & Oosthuizen, S. (ed.) An atlas of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire history: 34. Cambridge: Centre for Regional Studies, Anglia Polytechnic University.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2011. Writing into land—Haddenham and the Lower Ouse environs, in Schofield, J. (ed.) Great excavations: shaping the archaeologicalprofession: 148-66. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2012. Archaeology and the repeatable experiment: a comparativeagenda, in Jones, A.M., Pollard, J., Allen, M. J. & Gardiner, J. (ed.) Image, memory and monumentality: archaeological engagements with the material world (Prehistoric Society Research Paper 5): 295306. Oxford: Oxbow & the Prehistoric Society.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2013. Against narrative: reading and gauging sequences. Landscapes 14:103–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/1466203513Z.000000000 Google Scholar
Evans, C. & Hodder, I.. 2006a. A woodland archaeology: Neolithic sites at Haddenham (The Haddenham Project Volume I). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Google Scholar
Evans, C. 2006b. Marshl and communities and cultural landscape: Neolithic sites at Haddenham (The Haddenham Project Volume II). Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.Google Scholar
Evans, C. & Knight, M.. 2000. A fenland delta: later prehistoric land-use in the lower Ouse reaches, in Dawson, M. (ed.) Prehistoric, Roman and Saxon landscape studies in the Great Ouse Valley: 89106. York: Council for British Archaeology.Google Scholar
Evans, C. & Knight, M.. 2001. The ‘community of builders’: the Barleycroft post alignments, in Bruck, J. (ed.) Bronze Age landscapes: tradition and transformation: 8398. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Evans, C. & Linden, M. Vander. 2008. The Godwin Ridge, Over, Cambridgeshire: a (wet-) landscape corridor. Notae Praehistoricae 28:4754.Google Scholar
Evans, C., Pollard, J. & Knight, M.. 1999. Life in the woods: tree-throws, ‘settlement’ and forest cognition. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 18:241-54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-0092.00081 Google Scholar
Evans, C., Edmonds, M. & Boreham, S.. 2006. ‘Total archaeology’ and model landscapes: excavation of the Great Wilbraham causewayed enclosure, Cambridgeshire, 1975-76. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 72:113-62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, C. with Mackay, D. & Webley, L.. 2008. Borderlands—the archaeology of the Addenbrooke's environs, South Cambridge (CAU Landscape Archives: New Archaeologies of the Cambridge Region series). Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit. Google Scholar
Evans, C. with Beadsmoore, E., Brudenell, M. & Lucas, G.. 2009. Fengate revisited: further fen-edge excavations, Bronze Age fieldsystems/settlement and the Wyman Abbott/Leeds Archives. Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit.Google Scholar
Evans, C. with Tabor, J. & Linden, M. Vander. Forthcoming. Twice-crossed river: prehistoric and palaeoenvironmental investigations at Barleycroft Farm/Over, Cambridgeshire (The Archaeology of the Lower Ouse Valley III). Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit.Google Scholar
French, C. 2003. Geoarchaeology in action: studies in soil micro morphology and landscape evolution. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Garrow, D. 2006. Pits, settlement and deposition during the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age in East Anglia (British Archaeological Reports British series 114). 3 Oxford: J. & E. Hedges.Google Scholar
Garrow, D., Lucy, S. & Gibson, D.. 2006. Excavations at Kilverstone, Norfolk: an episodic landscape history (East Anglia Archaeology Report 113). Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit.Google Scholar
Garwood, P. 2007. Before the hills in order stood: chronology, time and history in the interpretation of Early Bronze Age round barrows, in Last, J. (ed.) Beyondthe grave: new perspectives on barrows: 3052. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Gdaniec, K., Edmonds, M. & Wiltshire, P.. 2008. A line across land: surveyand excavation on the Isleham-Elypipeline (East Anglia Archaeology Report 121). Cambridge: Cambridge Archaeological Unit.Google Scholar
Green, H. S. 1974. Early Bronze Age burial, territory, and population in Milton Keynes, Buckingham, andthe Great Ouse Valley. The Archaeological Journal 131:75139.Google Scholar
Groube, L. M. 1981. Blackholes in Britishprehistory: the analysis of settlement distributions, in Hodder, I., Isaac, G. & Hammond, N. (ed.) Pattern of the past: studies in honour of David Clarke: 185209. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Healy, F. & Harding, J.. 2007. A thousand and one things to do with a round barrow, in Last, J. (ed.) Beyond the grave: new perspectives on barrows: 5371. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. & Orton, C.. 1976. Spatial analysis in archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Last, J. 2007. Covering old ground: barrows as closures, in Last, J. (ed.) Beyondthe grave: new perspectives on barrows: 157-75. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Levi-Strauss, C. 1966 [1962]. The savage mind. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Lock, G. & Molyneaux, B. (ed.). 2006. Confronting scale in archaeology: issues of theory and practice. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Louwe Kooijmans, L.P. 1974. The Rhine/Meuse Delta: four studies on its prehistoric occupation and holocene geology. Leiden: Leiden University.Google Scholar
Lucas, G. 2005. The archaeologyoftime. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Lucas, G. 2008. Time and the archaeological event. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 18:5965. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S095977430800005X Google Scholar
Pryor, F. 1984. Excavation at Fengate, Peterborough, England: the fourth report (Northamptonshire Archaeological Society Monograph 2/Royal Ontario Museum Archaeology Monograph 7). Leicester: Northamptonshire Archaeological Society; Toronto: Royal Ontario Museum.Google Scholar
Pryor, F. 1998. Etton—excavationsat a Neolithiccausewayed enclosure near Maxey, Cambridgeshire 1982-7 (English Heritage Archaeological Reports 18). London: English Heritage.Google Scholar
Reynolds, N. & Barber, J.. 1984. Analytical excavation. Antiquity 58:95100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steele, J. & Shennan, S.. 2009. Introduction: demography and cultural macroevolution. Human Biology 81:105-19.Google Scholar
Yates, D. T. 2007. Land, powerandprestige:Bronze Age field systems in southern England. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, A., Hilpert, J. & Wendt, K. P.. 2009. Estimations of population density for selected periods between the Neolithic and AD 1800. Human Biology 81:357-80.Google Scholar