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Archaeological Find May Lead To Rewriting Of History
Dawn ^ | 11-21-2003 | Robin McKie

Posted on 11/21/2003 9:13:10 AM PST by blam

Archaeological find may lead to rewriting of history

By Robin McKie

LONDON: Scientists have uncovered a landscape of buried buildings and villages representing more than 6,000 years of British history.

Anglo-Saxon settlements, Roman houses, Bronze Age graves and Iron Age homes - covered by thick layers of sand and loam - have been pinpointed using hi-tech magnetic sensors and air reconnaissance surveys.

The discovery, at West Heslerton in northern England, suggests the British countryside may have been far more intensively occupied and farmed than previously realized. The surveys have also directed archaeologists to make several significant finds, including a 1,300-year-old brooch scrawled with letters that are the oldest known form of writing in English.

Archaeologists believe the Heslerton Parish project could lead to a shake-up in our understanding of the nation's history. "Take the Dark Ages," said project leader Dominic Powlesland. "Our work shows they never really existed. Civilization didn't disappear in Britain when the Romans left. Buildings were in continuous use and farms operated quite successfully between the Romans leaving and the Anglo-Saxons taking over."

But the discovery - rated as one of the most important archaeological finds in Britain - is under threat. Farmers are being urged to start digging up land to plant potatoes for the nearby McCain French fries factory.

"This is the archaeological equivalent of finding the Domesday Book - then having it burned before your eyes before you get a chance to open it," said David Miles, chief archaeologist of English Heritage. "This site is as important as Stonehenge or Avebury. The graves, burial mounds, and houses have been left untouched by mechanized farming which has wrecked so much of the rest of our archaeology. What they can tell us is of immeasurable importance."

In an attempt to halt the site's destruction, urgent talks have been set up between English Heritage and the UK Department for the Environment, while project leaders and local farmers have also begun discussions.

The remarkable secret was revealed after councillors gave the go-ahead for a mineral extraction scheme in the middle of the site. Archaeologists carried out a survey before quarrying began and discovered an entire early Anglo-Saxon village and cemetery, preserved by sands that had blown from dunes in nearby wetlands.

Archaeologists - backed by the state-funded conservation body English Heritage - mapped the area to try to discover other settlements. First they used aerial reconnaissance photographs, then moved on to exploit new techniques for measuring magnetic variation underground. "When you make bricks or pots or plates, you cause tiny magnetic particles in the clay to line up to the lines of Earth's magnetic field," said Powlesland. "You can then detect the magnetic anomalies they produce underground."

After walking hundreds of kilometres with their instruments, archaeologists produced a map of buried roads, buildings and graves, and found that the 5 sq km site was criss-crossed with settlements and trackways.

These were then dated by drilling to retrieve samples. From this, they created a map of the different settlements and discovered that the drifting sands had sometimes covered a site during the Roman era, Anglo-Saxon times or the Bronze Age.

"We are not dealing with a single site," said Miles. "We are dealing with an entire three-dimensional landscape that covers 6,000 years of our history and prehistory. This place is unique."

It is the preservation of the buildings that causes special scientific excitement, say researchers. "Most Bronze Age burial mounds in this country have been broken into or cut up," said Powlesland. "In the past, it was assumed they were graves built only for important people and leaders.

Our surveys of the intact ones down there suggest it is more likely they were burial places for extended families. This is a vast untapped resource. We have to ensure that its most important parts are saved so that we can excavate and study them carefully. It would be tragic if this place was wrecked for a few potatoes." -Dawn/The Observer News Service.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: archaeological; find; godsgravesglyphs; history; lead; rewriting
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To: myself6
You just have to let some things go for the sake of today and tomorrow.

Quite so. No reason why we can't just plow up say, the Gettysburg Battlefield, and grow potatoes there, right? After all, the world requires its french fries.

Much depends on the value of the things you're letting go, I'd say.

21 posted on 11/21/2003 11:15:57 AM PST by Mackey (Of course, nothing on Earth could be older than 6,000 years. < /sarcasm >)
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To: PeterPrinciple
Would anyone know the origin of this? Assume it is military but would it be in regard to the French Revolution, WWI or WWII or????

USN WWI, according to the Wentworth and Flexner Dictionary of American Slang

22 posted on 11/21/2003 11:23:13 AM PST by null and void (The evil is in plain sight, the danger increases with denial. - George W. Bush)
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To: myself6
England does not have the explicit prohibition from our Constitution that private property may not be taken "without just compensation." However, the sense of fairness in American law is borrowed from English law.

I thoroughly agree that the farmers should not be prevented from using their own land, without just compensation. However, this site seems to be so impressive, and so capable of expanding our knowledge of our past, that the government should pony up, pay the farmers, and then excavate this site with all possible skill.

Congressman Billybob

Latest column, "Double Crossing at the Rio Grande," discussion thread. IF YOU WANT A FREEPER IN CONGRESS, CLICK HERE.

23 posted on 11/21/2003 11:25:46 AM PST by Congressman Billybob (www.ArmorforCongress.com Visit. Join. Help. Please.)
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To: Mackey
It seems you have either missed my point or have chose to ignore it.

I could care less what the OWNERS of the property are doing with their property. It matters very little if they are growing potatoes, tomatoes or wheat or they are building a house, a barn or an adult bookstore. What matters is that it is THIER property and it should NOT be taken or used AGAINST the owners will by anyone.

Value can only be determined by someone who owns a "thing" or wishes to own a "thing". You can try and place a value on something you do NOT own but it will not get you very far, nor should it. Believe it or not, there are people who really put no value on the battlefield you mentioned. To them it is nothing more than good farmland or a nice place to put a home and raise a family. Both you and that person has placed a value on that land according to your desires and whomever values that land more can own it. How would you like it if you owned this battlefield and wished to keep it a museum of the civil war but someone or a group of people or a government came along and forcefully took it from you because they desired to do something else with it?



24 posted on 11/21/2003 11:58:22 AM PST by myself6 (Unionize IT?! "I will stop the motor of the world" - John Galt)
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To: blam; farmfriend
...the nearby McCain French fries factory.


Just look for me on the package!

25 posted on 11/21/2003 12:03:46 PM PST by uglybiker (The only thing Democrats contributed to Bush's tax cut package was the word "TAX')
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To: Congressman Billybob
I understand your point and am tempted to agree with it because I too desire to see what is there.

BUT...


I do not believe that my desires or the desires of a majority outweigh those of the PROPERTY OWNER.

YES... They should make this owner an offer BUT, if the owner refuses... THAT should be THAT, because the OWNER has obviously decided that his desires have more value to him.

What if you thought it noble to save the very rare species of flea that existed on his property? We could learn allot from this flea. We don’t want to reduce the population of this flea or its habitat. Would you agree to taking his land against his will then?


Compensation ALONE is not moral justification. ONLY a willing trade of value can be moral.
26 posted on 11/21/2003 12:12:32 PM PST by myself6 (Unionize IT?! "I will stop the motor of the world" - John Galt)
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To: Mackey
An interesting note is that the author has given us a subtle choice that french fries excludes history. This site has remained so for how many centuries?? Will growing french fries (yes, I know) really damage the history there or does the author have an agenda? I suspect that this ground has been farmed once or twice since then. Get the facts at any cost.

As I get older a lot of sayings I heard as a kid come to the surface. One of them is:"It doesn't matter where you've been, it's where you are going that counts."

Right now, I think limited resources ought to be placed on where we are going.

At this point with limited information and my best logical assumptions, I still vote for the fries(political correctness works, I will now call them fries in order not to offend anyone). But then my vote doesn't matter much as it is in England.
27 posted on 11/21/2003 12:14:50 PM PST by PeterPrinciple
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To: Congressman Billybob
"...that the government should pony up, pay the farmers, and then excavate this site with all possible skill. "



Congressman Billybob,

I'm ashamed of you, how quickly we fall into the idea of government solving all our problems with other peoples money. At least ask a liberal foundation first or maybe a rich conservative.

Peter
28 posted on 11/21/2003 12:20:24 PM PST by PeterPrinciple
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To: myself6
A private land seizure that went bad. Click here

The tree was recently dated by dendrochronologists (tree ring experts) to a little over 100 years old.

29 posted on 11/21/2003 12:20:25 PM PST by blam
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To: farmfriend
I would like to be added to the GGG pinglist farmfriend. Catch most, but not all of the pinged threads.

This site, with such a long length of continuous habitation, could lend further insight into population density and Atlantic Jetstream realtionships in the Isles. Some climatologists have raised the specter of a new cooling trend in the Isles, which would decimate the population in centuries previous due to shorter and less predictable growing seasons. Of course, the Brits would just buy some US grain now. And take more holidays to Majorca.


30 posted on 11/21/2003 12:20:43 PM PST by JerseyHighlander (quid quid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.)
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To: JerseyHighlander
Consider yourself added. If you ever change your mind, just let me know.
31 posted on 11/21/2003 12:24:06 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: PeterPrinciple
Good Lord. There are legitimate functions for government.

Several years ago, two lead-lined caskets were dug up and examined archeologically in St. Mary's County in southern Maryland. The people buried were tentatively identified as members of the Calvert family -- creators of the Colony of Maryland. It is not a "conservative" position that basic research like that should not be done by government. That is a "foolish" position.

If foundations, universities, whatever get involved in such research, more's the better. But the idea that such an opportunity as in England should be lost for want of action is historically insane.

I suggest you reconsider your reaction to this story.

John / Billybob

32 posted on 11/21/2003 1:43:10 PM PST by Congressman Billybob (www.ArmorforCongress.com Visit. Join. Help. Please.)
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To: myself6
Oh, I see your point...I just indulged myself in a minor rant. Archaeological finds such as this one are rare, and there are so many missing pieces of history to fill in. The thought that a significant portion of this site could be destroyed forever, simply for something so ordinary as a crop of potatoes, set my teeth on edge.
33 posted on 11/21/2003 2:34:01 PM PST by Mackey (Of course, nothing on Earth could be older than 6,000 years. < /sarcasm >)
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To: Congressman Billybob
"Good Lord. There are legitimate functions for government. "


Yes, a good discussion of what those legitimate funtions are would be invigorating.

Much of this stuff was done and financed through non governmental entities in our own US history. Universities used to be private. Hospitals used to be private and local. Welfare used to be private and local.

UNLIKE YOU, I DO NOT SEE GOVERNMENT AS THE SOLUTION TO EVERY SITUATION!!!!!!!!!!

How much of your personal money would you or did you invest in the the lead lined caskets? Is it of value with other peoples money and not your own? If there is a local historical society and they want to do it,great. Yes they used to exist and be very common until someone decided that government should do it with other peoples money. And they used to make good decisions on what was important historicalLY because money was limited. They had to prioritize!!!!!!

I suggest you rethink your position. I am not against history but think it is a lazy man who thinks government is the solution to situations such as this.

If this is important to you then send your own money to this noble cause. I will respect you for it and by your example, I might even contribute to it.
34 posted on 11/22/2003 8:37:08 AM PST by PeterPrinciple
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To: PeterPrinciple
To paraphrase your comment to me: UNLIKE YOU, I DO NOT GROSSLY EXAGGERATE OTHER PEOPLE'S ARGUMENTS IN ORDER TO ATTACK A STRAW MAN IN MY POSTS ON FR.

Give it a rest.

John / Billybob

35 posted on 11/22/2003 10:32:54 AM PST by Congressman Billybob (www.ArmorforCongress.com Visit. Join. Help. Please.)
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To: blam
BTTT
36 posted on 02/06/2004 4:44:22 PM PST by carpio
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