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A First-Century Fort near Gosbecks, Essex
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2011
Extract
It has become fashionable in British archaeological circles to criticize airphotographers for continuing to reconnoitre the better-known districts such as the upper Thames valley or the Yorkshire Wolds, when they might be using their limited flying time to explore areas where little or nothing has yet been recorded from the air. The importance of making flights over the less rewarding ground is undeniable, but it is quite wrong to assume that the ‘classic’ crop-mark areas have nothing more to reveal. Every year brings major aerial discoveries on the chalklands and river-gravels of southern Britain, and their value is enhanced – not diminished – by the body of knowledge already available for each locality. Individual sites, although revisited year after year, may display vital new information only after literally decades of scrutiny, and continued surveillance is called for if air-photography is to play a fully effective part in archaeological exploration.
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- Copyright © D. R. Wilson 1977. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
References
1 Wilson, D. R., Scottish Archaeol. Forum 7 (1975), 27Google Scholar.
2 The fort was also identified independently by Mr J. N. Hampton of the Air Photographs Unit, National Monuments Record.
3 Richmond, I. A., Hod Hill ii (1968), fig. 62Google Scholar.
4 M. Todd (ed.), The Roman Fort at Great Casterton, Rutland (1968), 17, with fig. 2.
5 C. F. C. Hawkes & M. R. Hull, Camulodunum (1947), 10–11.
6 Dunnett, B. R. K., Britannia ii (1971), 27–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
7 Jones, M. J., ‘Roman Fort-Defences to A.D. 117’, British Archaeol. Rep. 21 (1975). 82–3Google Scholar.
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