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Keyword: timeteam

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  • Archaeologists Totally Confused By Bizarre Anglo-Saxon Find

    01/02/2024 8:42:07 AM PST · by Red Badger · 72 replies
    Daily Caller ^ | January 02, 2024 10:16 AM ET | KAY SMYTHE
    An object uncovered by archaeologists in Norfolk, England, is “completely unlike” anything else ever discovered, experts said Monday. The tiny 19.4 mm (o.7 inch) object is a gilded silver relic, adorned with intricate designs appearing to show an animal looking over its shoulder, according to The Telegraph. The piece is believed to be at least 1,200 years old and archaeologists reportedly can’t determine the purpose of the mysterious object. Detectorists found the piece in a crumpled condition, but it appears to be a round object with shallow sides, making it somewhat dish-shaped. “It was made by someone with a real...
  • Unique reconstruction of traditional Anglo-Saxon hall house officially opened at Butser Ancient Farm

    04/09/2022 10:00:53 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 20 replies
    The News (Portsmouth UK) ^ | Tuesday, 5th April 2022 | Steve Deeks
    The house at Butser Ancient Farm, based on archaeological remains from Chalton, has taken nearly four years to complete after work started in 2018.Now thanks to the hard work of volunteers and staff, under the expert leadership of Darren Hammerton, the ancient house has now thrown open its doors – with Time Team’s Dr Harding present to mark the occasion.All timber used in the construction came from within a 10-mile radius of Butser Ancient Farm, with a combination of English oak, sweet chestnut and hazel used in the construction. The roof was thatched with water reeds.The settlement at Church Down...
  • Evidence found of ancient tribute to King Arthur's Round Table

    08/28/2006 8:01:39 AM PDT · by Marius3188 · 58 replies · 3,308+ views
    Daily Mail ^ | 28 Aug 2006 | BEN CLERKIN & CHARLOTTE GILL
    It is a legendary artefact of British history - albeit one for which there is no evidence. In 1344, King Edward III supposedly built a huge round hall to house a table for his 300 knights. His aim was to recreate the Arthurian legend of the Knights of the Round Table. The only problem was that - much like King Arthur's original Table at Camelot - many historians doubted whether it actually existed. Until now that is. For archaeologists digging up the Queen's front lawn at Windsor Castle yesterday unearthed a spectacular find. Below the turf of one of the...
  • Soldiers find skeleton of Saxon warrior on Salisbury Plain

    03/01/2019 11:54:41 PM PST · by SunkenCiv · 17 replies
    Guardian UK ^ | Wednesday, July 25, 2018 | Maev Kennedy
    Barrow Clump has a remarkably long history of human activity. The Bronze Age burial mound built on an even older Neolithic settlement, was reused as an Anglo-Saxon cemetery. It had already been damaged by ploughing, but permission to excavate a listed site was granted because of damage by more recent trouble makers -- badgers which were burrowing out the entire site, and kicking out human bones as they dug. This year's excavation was just beside the burial mound -- "the badgers are happily back in residence in the barrow now" Osgood said -- carried out in scorching heat and clay...
  • Underwater Dunwich {3rd largest city in England swept into sea, 14th c}

    02/16/2016 7:22:52 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 47 replies
    Touching the Tide ^ | 2016 | website : onesuffolk, design : squircle creative
    Dunwich is the iconic lost city -- in the early Middle Ages this town was one of the largest in England, and its outer walls stood nearly two miles beyond the present shoreline. Since then coastal erosion, and particularly several huge storms in the late 1200s and early 1300s, have almost entirely destroyed the town. Only the old Greyfriars Priory and a solitary gravestone survive of the old town... The project also found a new shipwreck off the coast of Dunwich. Dive team leader, Professor David Sear from Southampton University, reports from the Underwater Dunwich dive on the site's newly...
  • Secret Streets of Britain's 'Atlantis' Are Revealed

    05/12/2013 6:07:56 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 27 replies
    Science Daily ^ | May 9, 2013 | University of Southampton
    ...Present day Dunwich is a village 14 miles south of Lowestoft in Suffolk, but it was once a thriving port -- similar in size to 14th Century London. Extreme storms forced coastal erosion and flooding that have almost completely wiped out this once prosperous town over the past seven centuries. This process began in 1286 when a huge storm swept much of the settlement into the sea and silted up the Dunwich River. This storm was followed by a succession of others that silted up the harbour and squeezed the economic life out of the town, leading to its eventual...
  • Underwater City Could Be Revealed (UK)

    01/18/2008 11:00:03 AM PST · by blam · 50 replies · 310+ views
    BBC ^ | 1-18-2008
    Underwater city could be revealed Sonar, underwater camera and scanning equipment will be used Britain's own underwater "Atlantis" could be revealed for the first time with hi-tech underwater cameras. Marine archaeologist Stuart Bacon and Professor David Sear, of the University of Southampton, will explore the lost city of Dunwich, off the Suffolk coast. Dunwich gradually disappeared into the sea because of coastal erosion. "It's about the application of new technology to investigate Britain's Atlantis, then to give this information to the public," Professor Sear said. Mr Bacon, director of the Suffolk Underwater Studies, first located the debris of the lost...
  • Time Team 1066 special: Turks in Crowhurst?

    02/29/2016 8:18:03 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 37 replies
    Hastings and St. Leonards Observer ^ | Monday, December 9th, 2013 | unattributed
    As well as examining the official battlefield and the alternative site at Caldbec Hill, Time Team also considered the much-publicised theory that the battle took place in Crowhurst. Presenter Tony Robinson travelled to the village to meet local historian Nick Austin, who first made the claims in his 2011 book, The Secrets of the Norman Invasion. Nick told Tony that his evidence is based on written material from the period, typography and archeological evidence. And he added that dowsing had revealed traces of a Turkish-style crossbow on the site - leading him to believe that Turks played their part in...
  • The detection of gravitational waves – a triumph of science enabled by fossil fuels

    02/19/2016 3:06:33 PM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 9 replies
    wattsupwiththat.com ^ | February 17, 2016 | Anthony Watts
    Anthony Watts / 3 days ago February 17, 2016 Last week, the science world was abuzz with the news that gravitational waves had been discovered thanks to the LIGO project and the team of international scientists that made it possible. At WUWT, I covered the story here, saying that it was a “triumph of science”. Indeed it was, and still is, and the effects of this discovery on science will ripple into the future for decades and centuries to come.I woke in the middle of the night as I sometimes do, for no particular reason except that my brain doesn’t...