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    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 2 16:14:52 2024
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    from https://www.cnn.com/2024/03/20/europe/must-farm-bronze-age-britain-pompeii-scn

    Best to go to the citation to see the drawings.

    ‘Britain’s Pompeii’ reveals Bronze Age village frozen in time
    Katie Hunt
    By Katie Hunt, CNN
    7 minute read
    Updated 11:37 AM EDT, Wed March 20, 2024

    9 comments
    A metal axe head with wooden shaft was among the many well-preserved
    artifacts discovered at Must Farm, near Peterborough in the county of Cambridgeshire in England.
    A metal axe head with wooden shaft was among the many well-preserved
    artifacts discovered at Must Farm, near Peterborough in the county of Cambridgeshire in England. Cambridge Archaeological Unit
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    It’s late summer 2,850 years ago. A fire engulfs a stilt village perched above a boggy, slow-moving river that weaves though the wetlands of
    eastern England. The tightly packed roundhouses, built from wood, straw,
    turf and clay just nine months earlier, go up in flames.

    The inhabitants flee, leaving behind all their belongings, including a
    wooden spoon in a bowl of half-eaten porridge. There is no time to
    rescue the fattened lambs, which are trapped and burnt alive.

    The scene is a vivid and poignant snapshot, captured by archaeologists,
    of a once thriving community in late Bronze Age Britain known as Must
    Farm, near what’s now the town of Peterborough. The research team
    published a two-volume monograph on Wednesday that describes their
    painstaking $1.4 million (£1.1 million) excavation and analysis of the
    site in the county of Cambridgeshire.

    Described by the experts involved as an “archaeological nirvana,” the
    site is the only one in Britain that lives up to the “Pompeii premise,” they say, referencing the city forever frozen in time by the eruption of
    Mount Vesuvius in AD 79 that has yielded unparalleled information about
    ancient Rome.

    “In a typical Bronze Age site, if you’ve got a house, you’ve probably
    got maybe a dozen post holes in the ground and they’re just dark shadows
    of where it once stood. If you’re really lucky, you’ll get a couple of shards of pottery, maybe a pit with a bunch of animal bones. This was
    the complete opposite of that process. It was just incredible,” said
    Chris Wakefield of the Cambridge Archaeological Unit at the University
    of Cambridge, an archaeologist and member of the 55-person team that
    excavated the site in 2016.

    “All the axe marks had been used to shape and sculpt the wood. All of
    those looked fresh, like they could have been done last week by
    someone,” Wakefield added.

    The remarkably preserved condition of the site and its contents enabled
    the archaeological team to draw comprehensive new insights into Bronze
    Age society — findings that could overturn the current understanding of
    what everyday life was like in Britain during the ninth century BC.

    Shown here is an artist's illustration of what the inside of the
    roundhouses may have looked like.
    Shown here is an artist's illustration of what the inside of the
    roundhouses may have looked like. Judith Dobie
    Must Farm domesticity — and a mystery
    The site, which dates to eight centuries before Romans arrived in
    Britain, revealed four roundhouses and a square entranceway structure,
    which stood approximately 6.5 feet (2 meters) above the riverbed and
    were surrounded by a 6.5-foot (2-meter) fence of sharpened posts.

    The archaeologists believe the settlement was likely twice as big.
    However, quarrying in the 20th century destroyed any other remains.

    Though charred from the fire, the remaining buildings and their contents
    were extremely well preserved by the oxygen-starved conditions of the
    fens, or wetlands, and included many wooden and textile items that
    rarely survive in the archaeological record. Together, traces of the
    settlement paint a picture of cozy domesticity and relative plenty.

    The excavation of the site in 2016 involved a team of 55 people.
    The excavation of the site in 2016 involved a team of 55 people.
    Cambridge Archaeological Unit
    The researchers unearthed 128 ceramic artifacts — jars, bowls, cups and cookware — and were able to deduce that 64 pots were in use at the time
    of fire. The team found some stored pots neatly nested. Textiles found
    at the site made from flax linen had a soft, velvety feel with neat
    seams and hems, although it wasn’t possible to identify individual
    pieces of clothing.

    Wooden artifacts included boxes and bowls carved from willow, alder and
    maple, 40 bobbins, many with threads still attached, various tools, and
    15 wooden buckets.

    “One of those buckets … on the bottom of it were loads and loads of cut marks so we know that people living in that Bronze Age kitchen when they
    needed an impromptu chopping board, were just flipping that bucket
    upside down and using that as a chopping surface,” Wakefield said.

    “It’s those little moments that build together to give a richer, fuller picture of what was going on.”

    Textiles made from flax linen were among the rare finds.
    Textiles made from flax linen were among the rare finds. Cambridge Archaeological Unit
    The circumstances of the event that brought it all to a halt are still a
    bit of a mystery. The researchers believe the fire took place in late
    summer or early autumn because skeletal remains of the lambs kept by one household showed the animals, typically born in spring, were three
    months to six months old.

    However, what exactly caused the devastating fire remains unclear. The
    blaze could have been accidental or deliberately started. The
    researchers uncovered a stack of spears with shafts over 10 feet (3
    meters) long at the site, and many experts think that warfare was common
    in the time period. The team worked with a forensic fire investigator
    but ultimately couldn’t identify a specific “smoking gun” clue pointing to the cause.

    “An archaeological site is a lot like a jigsaw puzzle. At a typical site
    you have 10 or 20 pieces out of 500,” Wakefield said. “Here we had 250
    or 300 pieces and we still couldn’t get the complete picture on how this
    big fire broke out.”


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    Mike Parker Pearson, a professor of British later prehistory at the
    Institute of Archaeology at University College London, described both
    the report and the site “as exceptional.” He wasn’t involved in the research.

    “The fire may have been disastrous for the inhabitants but it is a
    blessing for archaeologists, a unique snapshot of life in the Bronze
    Age,” he said via email.

    Upending ideas about Bronze Age society
    The contents across the four preserved houses were “remarkably
    consistent.” Each one had a tool kit that included sickles, axes, gouges
    and handheld razors used to cut hair or cloth. With almost 538 square
    feet (50 square meters) of floor space in the largest, each of the
    dwellings appeared to have distinct activity zones comparable to rooms
    in a modern home.

    “By plotting the positions of all these finds — pots, loomweights, tools and even sheep droppings, the archaeological team have reconstructed the houses’ internal use of space,” Parker Pearson noted. “The kitchen area was in the east, the storage and weaving area in the south and southeast
    with the penning area for lambs, and the sleeping area in the northwest,
    though we don’t know where the doorway was for each house.”

    Not all the items were of practical use, such as 49 glass beads plus
    others made of amber. Archaeologists also unearthed a woman’s skull,
    smooth from touch, possibly a keepsake of a lost loved one. Some of the
    items the researchers found will go on display starting April 27 in an exhibition titled “Introducing Must Farm, a Bronze Age Settlement” at
    the Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery.

    The village's inhabitants only occupied the site for a short time, but
    they owned and used many rich and varied objects.
    The village's inhabitants only occupied the site for a short time, but
    they owned and used many rich and varied objects. Cambridge
    Archaeological Unit
    Lab analysis of biological remains revealed the types of food the
    community once consumed. A pottery bowl imprinted with the finger marks
    of its maker held a final meal — a wheat grain porridge mixed with
    animal fat. Chemical analyses of the bowls and jars showed traces of
    honey along with deer, suggesting the people who used the dishes might
    have enjoyed honey-glazed venison.

    Ancient excrement found in waste piles below where the houses would have
    stood showed that the community kept dogs that fed on scraps from their owners’ meals. And human fossilized poop, or coprolites, showed that at
    least some inhabitants suffered from intestinal worms.

    The waste piles, or middens, were one line of evidence that showed how
    long the site was occupied, with a thin layer of refuse suggesting the settlement was built nine months to a year before it went up in flames.
    Two other factors supported that line of reasoning, Wakefield said.

    Analyses of Bronze Age dishes found at the site, such as the spoon
    (left) and bowl (right) shown here, have helped reveal what Must Farm inhabitants ate.
    Analyses of Bronze Age dishes found at the site, such as the spoon
    (left) and bowl (right) shown here, have helped reveal what Must Farm inhabitants ate. Cambridge Archaeological Unit
    “The second was that a lot of the wood that was used in the construction
    was unseasoned, it was still effectively green, it hadn’t been long in position,” he said.

    “The third one is that we have a lack of the kind of insects and animals
    that are associated with human habitation. It wouldn’t be long before
    beetles would worm (in) … but there’s no evidence of any of that in any
    of the 18,000 plus timbers.”

    The fact that the site, with its rich and varied contents, was in use
    for only a year upended the team’s preconceived “visions of everyday life” in the ninth century BC and may suggest that Bronze Age societies
    were perhaps less hierarchical than traditionally thought, according to
    the 1,608-page report.

    “We are seeing here not the accumulation of a lifetime, but just a
    year’s worth of materials,” the authors noted in the report. “It
    suggests that artefacts such as bronze tools and glass beads were more
    common than we often imagine and that their availability may not in fact
    have been restricted.”


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    cnn-user-q02kqj
    23 March, 2024

    Fantastic, makes one want to visit the exhibit.


    Reply




    cnn-user-8ierto
    22 March, 2024

    We are not so different from Bronze Age man as we think we are


    Reply

    1



    Poppawolf
    21 March, 2024

    looking at the dig site picture....it was very large find...awesome work....


    Reply

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