Tag Archives: allen archaeology

It’s been an exciting and busy time at AAL and after a short hiatus the blog is now back up and running, starting with a little bit about Tash Brett, Project Archaeologist!

What is your job role?

Project Archaeologist

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?

Almost 2 years

How would describe your excavation technique?

If in doubt, wack it out!

How long have you been working in archaeology?

Overall 5 or so years

How did you get into archaeology?

Through Operation Nightingale. I volunteered on their site on Salisbury Plain and have loved it ever since. No one can say their first dig was an Anglo-Saxon burial ground!

What is the best thing about your job?

Seeing all the wonderful finds that come through the office and learning how to differentiate between different types of pottery.

Specialist skills?

I have a couple of years of archiving experience, and I do enjoy that type of work and can do it pretty well, so I would say that might be my main skill in archaeology.

Best site hut biscuit?

Depends on the weather – right now it’s sunny so could happily go for a bourbon!

By Kelly Corlett-Slater

I am a History and Archaeology student at Bishop Grosseteste University and I have been volunteering at Allen Archaeology for four weeks during the summer holidays. During my time here I have been doing post-excavation finds processing with Archive Supervisors Yvonne Rose and Cova Escandon; washing and marking finds from a late Roman kiln site in north Lincolnshire.

My favourite artefacts so far have been large fragments of ‘kiln furniture’ which now appear as very heavy, dark grey pieces of baked clay which would have formed part of the internal workings of a Roman kiln. These would have been in the form of kiln supports, a floor, and possible dividers or ‘wheels’ where the pottery was placed for firing. These were covered in powdery black silt which was easy to wash off. When these artefacts were clean and dry, the evidence as to how they were made becomes apparent. I was able to distinguish the folds in the clay, the fingerprints of the potter or kiln-maker, and the indent marks of straw and twigs that would have occurred when the clay was first used to line the kiln.

Kiln furniture from a site in North Lincolnshire

Kiln furniture from a site in North Lincolnshire

Allen Archaeology’s trainee Roman pottery specialist, Alice Beasley, explained how the kiln would have looked and functioned, describing how the repeated firing of the kiln would have melted the inclusions within the clay giving it an overall denser and darker appearance.

At least 4,500 sherds of pottery have been recovered surrounding the six kilns on site, with many pieces showing evidence of unsuccessful firing. These have bubbles on both the inner and outer surface that have expanded and exploded in the kiln during firing. To me these are more fascinating than successfully fired pieces of pottery! These unsuccessful broken sherds occur when the potter has not sufficiently beaten the clay to remove excess air bubbles or if sufficient temperatures have not been reached during the firing process.

Pottery sherds showing evidence of unsuccessful firing

Pottery sherds showing evidence of unsuccessful firing

Having just completed Antony Lee’s Roman Archaeology module at BGU, I learnt a lot about the different types of Roman pottery found in Lincolnshire and how they were made. Volunteering at Allen Archaeology has compounded this knowledge giving me the wonderful opportunity to have hands on experience with these artefacts and having experts answering my many questions. I have thoroughly enjoyed my time here and look forward to returning to do some more voluntary work in the future.

By Alice Beasley, Project Archaeologist

For the past 8 years I have been travelling to the island of Rousay, Orkney to participate in an excavation on a multiphase site at the Knowe of Swandro run by the University of Bradford in collaboration with the William Patterson University and the City University of New York as a student training excavation. Thanks to the powers that be here at Allen archaeology my time in Orkney continued out of university and into my professional career. The site consists of a Neolithic burial chamber surrounded by Iron age, Pictish and Viking settlement.

The site is constantly under threat from coastal erosion and, despite covering the excavation with nearly 40 tonnes of stone every year, damage is being done. This summer I had the pleasure of working near the chambered tomb attempting to record and remove the rubble built up against it in the Iron Age. We have a lot of evidence that the tomb has been altered during this period ( https://www.swandro.co.uk/dig-diary/dig-diary-saturday-21st-july-photo-clean-frenzy) when a large round house was built right on the top of the mound probably recycling stone from the tomb itself.

After finding a new wall on day 1 I carefully excavated a collapsed roof above layers of rubble riddled with voids and pottery all built up to support a rather crudely made wall that was probably part of a cell like structure tacked onto the outside of the tomb. Nothing on this site is simple which is one reason why I like it so much, walls appear then disappear into other buildings, and are refaced many years later, some buildings have been dug out and smaller ones built within, and others have been completely backfilled and built on top of. All this information adds up to give a very complete history of the site. I get to spend all day working on a beach with amazing views and the infamous changeable Orkney weather, which this year has been very kind to us.

Part of the wall structure

Part of the wall structure

It would be very remiss of me not to mention the Pictish smithy, a fantastic partially subterranean building, home to a copperworking smith using Viking technology for the alloys and leaving his (or her) sooty handprints on the stone anvil. Almost every day amazing artefacts are found be it a painted pebble, worked antler or an almost complete pot. I would highly recommend visiting the website set up by the Swandro – Orkney coastal archaeology trust website www.swandro.co.uk for more in depth information including a dig diary!

The very exciting Pictish smithy!

The very exciting Pictish smithy!

Introducing Ben Lang, Trainee Project Archaeologist

What is your job role?

Trainee Archaeologist

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?

2 ½ weeks

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How would describe your excavation technique?

Methodical clearing of half the feature in question, followed by measuring and recording the feature.

How long have you been working in archaeology?

One-year commercial work plus I have volunteered on university lead excavations as early as 2011 when I was still doing my BSc (Hons) Archaeology degree.

How did you get into archaeology?

I first started Archaeology as one of my A levels in 2008 before doing a BSc (Hons) Archaeology degree while also volunteering with university lead project abroad. I also had prior experience doing volunteer work with an archaeologist friend in Switzerland helping to reconstruct metal smelting kilns and techniques from his excavation in Cyprus.

What is the best thing about your job?

All the experience I’m learning

Specialist skills?

3D laser scanning, good with computers

Best site hut biscuit?

Chocolate digestives