Archaeological dig planned as metal detectorist discovers untouched Bronze Age burial mound
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Dig Ventures is planning its next crowd-funded archaeological dig following a major Bronze Barrow discovery by an amateur archaeologist
Copper-alloy socketed chisel and fragment of a copper alloy dagger, found by metal detectorists at the site of the previously unknown Barrow, and dating to the Middle to Late Bronze Age© Stuart Noon An untouched Bronze Age burial mound is a rare thing in the archaeological landscape of Britain, but in a sleepy corner of the North West a metal detectorist’s chance discovery is about to trigger a major dig that archaeologists hope will uncover more secrets of our pre-historic ancestors.
Archaeology crowdfunding platform,
DigVentures, has launched a campaign to excavate the rare unexplored Bronze Age barrow in what will be the first scientific excavation of an undisturbed burial mound from the period in the region in over 50 years.
Preliminary investigations suggest the monument was in use for 1,500 years, beginning in the Late Neolithic period and ending around the Middle to Late Bronze Age. Examinations of the barrow also suggest a burial within it.
Describing barrows as “the best windows we have into the lives and deaths of Bronze Age Britons,” Brendon Wilkins, Archaeologist and Projects Director at DigVentures said, “discoveries such as these are the reason why archaeologists get out of bed in the morning.”
Fragment of a Bronze Age copper-alloy knife blade recovered by archaeologists© Stuart Noon Archaeologists and antiquarians have been excavating barrows since the
19th century but this rare undisturbed site was found when community
worker and amateur metal detectorist, Matthew Hepworth, found a Bronze Age knife
and a chisel in a small field.
Both artefacts, which are
remarkably well preserved, are rare for the area. Hepworth and his
friend David Kierzek reported their finds to the Portable Antiquities
Scheme - the DCMS funded project encouraging the voluntary recording of
archaeological objects found by members of the public in England and
Wales - allowing the important find to be excavated by an expert team.
Now,
after securing the support of the Heritage Lottery Fund with
£49,500, DigVentures is inviting anyone interested in discovering the
past to crowdfund the project on their website.
In return,
supporters become part of the dig team – through exclusive digital
access to project data, and the chance to participate in the expedition,
which takes place July 4 – 7 2016.
Copper-alloy ring likely to be part of a Bronze Age horse harness, recovered during initial exploration of the previously undiscovered Barrow© Stuart Noon Through a ‘buy one give one’
scheme, each crowdfunder who joins the field team will also create a
second place on the dig for a member of the local community.
Supporters,
who will be given training by Dig ventures, will be undertaking with
Bronze Age experts including Stuart Noon, PAS Finds Liaison Officer, and
Dr Ben Roberts, who is Lecturer in Museum Studies at Durham University
and was previously the Bronze Age curator at the British Museum.
A
pop-up museum on Morecambe Promenade where excavations will be
broadcast live will accompany the dig and act as an “archaeologist’s
incident room” where finds will be brought and processed, and where the
public can drop in to learn more.
Bronze Age stone tools recovered by archaeologists from the previously undiscovered Barrow© Stuart Noon Cremated bone, dating to the Bronze Age, and recovered by archaeologists from the previous undiscovered Barrow© Stuart Noon Worked flint tools© Stuart Noon The landscape of the site of the discovery More from Culture24's
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Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/archaeology/art548868-Archaeological-dig-planned-as-metal-detectorist-discovers-untouched-Bronze-Age-burial-mound