Abstract
Rural Anglo-Saxon settlements in the hinterland of York
are notoriously invisible. As a result of major urban rescue
archaeology campaigns in the 1970s, more could be
inferred about Anglo-Saxon Yorkshire from finds in York
than from rural sites. That picture is gradually changing.
During the last ten yews, research on two sites in the
Yorkshire Wolds - Wharram Percy and Cottam - now
allows us to explain this invisibility, and to characterise
settlements of this period. This paper describes how a
battery of archaeologica1 techniques, including aerial
photography, resistivity, magnetometry, fieldwalking,
excavation, and collaboration with metal-detectorists
have been used in combination to identify and map these
sites, with Geographical Information Systems (GIS) used
to integrate the information. The conclusion to be drawn
is that early medieval sites are not so much invisible as
hitherto unrecognised, and the foundations have now been
laid for a programme of identification based upon remote
sensing and cropmark morphology.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Early Deira: Archaeological studies of the East Riding in the fourth to ninth centuries AD |
Place of Publication | Oxford, UK |
Publisher | Oxbow Books |
Pages | 27-39 |
Number of pages | 12 |
ISBN (Print) | 1900188902 |
Publication status | Published - 2000 |
Bibliographical note
Reproduced with permission.Datasets
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Burrow House Farm, Cottam: an Anglian and Anglo-Scandinavian Settlement in East Yorkshire
Richards, J. D. (Creator), Archaeology Data Service, 2001
DOI: 10.5284/1000339
Dataset