Tag Archives: site hut biscuit

What is your job role?
Senior Project Archaeologist

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
I have worked for AAL since September 2015 with a quick travelling break to New Zealand in the middle. Although I did have a coffee and cake with a Historian out there so I’m going to call it a ‘research break’…

How would describe your excavation technique?
One cut. One fill.

Nicky digging

One cut, one fill

How long have you been working in archaeology?
Since September 2014

How did you get into archaeology?
I wrote a list of ideal jobs when I was about 8 with Archaeologist appearing second on the list after marine biologist but I don’t like boats so here I am!

What is the best thing about your job?
I love working outdoors, having in depth site discussions about why anyone would want to dig so many holes (pot calling kettle black me thinks), the copious amount of biscuits, finding really shiny things, finding not so shiny things, the list could go on!

Specialist skills?
Onsite recycling enforcer

Best site hut biscuit?
The mighty Hob nob! ‘Hobnob’ also incidentally was used in the early 19th century to mean ‘to socialise’ – something all archaeologists like to indulge in, if not with hobnobs then with other grain related products. Making me love Hobnobs even more, if possible!

What is your job role?
Project Manager

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
4 years

How would describe your excavation technique?
Formerly rapid bordering on cavalier

Mike the cowboy

Mike in his digging days

How long have you been working in archaeology?
19 years apparently!

How did you get into archaeology?
It was this or a trainee manager for a DIY store chain and at the time I didn’t know the simple joys of owning a shed.

What is the best thing about your job?
Changing the staff planner when Gav isn’t looking.

Specialist skills?
I know several ways to disarm angry people, which comes in useful when I change the planner.

Best site hut biscuit?
Always Jaffa Cakes by choice, even if for tax purposes they are technically cakes

Excavating a skeleton in October 2014

Excavating a skeleton in October 2014

What is your job role?
Project Supervisor

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
I started working for AAL in September 2013

How would describe your excavation technique?
Erratic – It’s a messy process, but normally produces good results!

How long have you been working in archaeology?
Since September 2013!

How did you get into archaeology?
Through a love of history, a burning desire not to work inside and just a little bit of luck I guess.

What is the best thing about your job?
The community aspects of it. I’ve been lucky enough to work on a few of our recent community projects and I love the buzz you get from engaging with the public and talking about archaeology. We have a pretty cool job and it’s nice to show it off!

…Also mud.

Specialist skills?
The ability to turn any conversation into one about cats??!

Best site hut biscuit?
The digestive. It’s a good honest biscuit that isn’t afraid of a little bit of tea.
Or a Custard Cream if I’m feeling fancy…

What is your job role?
Project ArchaeologistDominka Czop

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
1 year, 5 months

How would describe your excavation technique?
I always try to find the deeper meaning of the hole that I am digging.

How long have you been working in archaeology?
1 year, 5 month (I joined AAL as a trainee), however I have volunteered on excavations abroad and in Britain since 2009.

How did you get into archaeology?
My mum let me pick a book from the Readers’ Digest catalogue. I picked one about ancient Egypt and since reading it for the first time when I was seven, I wanted to be an archaeologist.

What is the best thing about your job?
Finds marking and excavating human skeletons. It is a shame but not many people seem to enjoy finds marking. When it comes to skeletons – I hope that one day I get to dig a mummy or a bog body!

Specialist skills?
I can say ‘my name is’ in ancient Egyptian and I am known for being very fast in bagging skeletons.

Best site hut biscuit?
Anything gluten-free. Preferably Jaffa cakes or short bread. I hate anything chocolate flavoured, especially brownies.

What is your job role?
Senior Project Archaeologist

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
3 years, 3 months and 13 days (approximately)

How would describe your excavation technique?
I attack things with gusto and hope for the best

How long have you been working in archaeology?
3 years, 3 months and 13 days (approximately)

Alice on a Sheffield University training dig at West Halton

At a Sheffield University training dig at West Halton

How did you get into archaeology?
Aged 10 I was dragged (whilst protesting) onto a field as part of a community project my mum was involved in. 5 minutes later I found a Neolithic leaf shaped arrowhead and after that I was hooked

What is the best thing about your job?
Digging big holes in the mud!

Specialist skills?
I can knit myself a nice brightly coloured site jumper that hides some of the mud. I’m in the early stages of training to be a Roman pottery specialist.

Best site hut biscuit?
I’m a big fan of the bourbon but if we are feeling fancy a Lotus caramelized biscuit hits the spot.

Gavin Glover
What is your job role?
Project Manager

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
5 years

How would describe your excavation technique?
Pointing from a distance

How long have you been working in archaeology?
Since the mid 1990s.

How did you get into archaeology?
I got a lucky break after a friend was working on a site that needed more staff and I was looking for work. It was only supposed to be a temporary stop-gap whilst I found something different. I’m not sure I’ve ever forgiven him.

What is the best thing about your job?
The people that I work with. Their ability to surprise me on a weekly basis keeps things interesting but has aged me considerably.

Specialist skills?
I used to be able to balance a cricket bat upright on my forehead

Best site hut biscuit?
The Ginger Nut is the prince of biscuits in any situation as far as I’m concerned

An Archaeologists toolbox

An Archaeologists toolbox

We all know that archaeologists own at least one trowel.

But there’s more to it than that, a menagerie of tools and pieces of equipment that are integral additions to the ‘tools of the trade’. But what makes up the elusive archeologist’s kit?

To start with the obvious; trowels, they are the universal (yet unofficial) symbol of Archaeology. A necessary part of the toolkit, and almost every archaeologist will own whether it gets used on a daily or yearly basis. I’ve spoken to people about their first trowel and they can always remember what happened if it is no longer with them. Fee fondly reminiscing about hers, which is likely now buried underneath concrete and tarmac from her first University Dig, and I can say that my first is still with me – gifted by my very proud grandparents.

Cat's clearly identified trowel

Cat’s clearly identified, if rarely used, trowel

Gloves of both the waterproof and thermal kind are two things that are underestimated fairly frequently. General waterproof gloves that are necessary for health and safety, but thermal gloves are pieces of equipment that I admit that I have forgotten many times and consequently suffered…

Finds bags are a staple. While they’re provided by the company, they disappear fairly quickly and it’s a good idea to have a stash of them by your side when you carefully excavate that fantastic piece of Roman jewelry no one else noticed, or when the site’s storage is at a distance from where you are working.

Two that tie together (haha) are lines of string and nails. These two are important for creating section lines, creating plans, marking GPS points for small find locations, and bartering. For future reference, a nail is worth 5 biscuits or an extra cup of tea…

A notebook isn’t absolutely essential, but it’s highly recommended… Not just to track how many nails you’ve traded for other supplies, but to mark down important numbers and information that you’ll need while on site. If you’re digging a pit you’ll need to remember two numbers just for the cut and fill, and photo numbers & GPS points are also necessary for future reference. If one of your colleagues asks who dug a certain pit number, if you can’t remember if it was you or not… you’re able to go back and look. Unluckily, if it was excavated wrong, there’s proof that it was you. On the contrary, if it was you who’d dug it and found something amazing, like the Roman jewelry mentioned before, you can prove that it was yourself that first cast eyes upon the artefact.

A well organised pencil case is essential

A well organised pencil case is essential

A pencil case is also recommended. From drawing plans to writing on finds bags, a sharpie and sharpened pencil are important. Aside from the obvious, things like scale rulers and erasers and pencil sharpeners, pencils are somewhat different. They shouldn’t be HB. These pencils will smudge and blur on the permatrace, a bit like waterproof tracing paper, that is used for plans and section drawings, and as a result of this, 6H pencils are recommended to reduce this smudging.

Tape measures are, in essence, similar to the string and nails. They’re used to measure for planning, to map out the location and size of the feature, and for your unsuspecting colleagues to trip over. Surveyor tape, I should add, is also good for measuring as tape measures may not be the right length or maneuverable enough for general archaeological use. Clips of varying types are recommended to attach it to objects, to create a reliable measuring line for your plans and/or sections.

All sorts of strategy's are employed to clearly identify kit

All sorts of strategy’s are employed to clearly identify kit

Line levels are important for when you start to plan the section of your feature. When drawing plans a straight line is needed as a base line for whatever you are drawing, and the line level would be used to make sure your string line is straight for finally drawing it out. Note that these are small and easily lost, and as a result your colleagues will ask to borrow them from you… and maybe give them back.

Finally I’ll be blunt – duplicates of everything. Archeologists enjoy ‘borrowing’ from each other for indeterminate amounts of time, and I think I can safely say that we’re all guilty of this…
In all seriousness, I started my traineeship with an entire tin of nails.

In conclusion, an archaeologist’s kit is varied and an amalgamation of tools that are the core essentials of any excavation and sometimes, they might even be the part of the original set that you bought.

Yvonne Rose

Archives Supervisor Yvonne Rose


What is your job role?
Project Supervisor (Archives)

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
Nearly 5 months

How would describe your excavation technique?
A distant memory!

How long have you been working in archaeology?
24 years

How did you get into archaeology?
Quite by accident! I’d been working as a wood machinist for a few years, and when I lost that job my partner (fellow archaeologist)’s boss took pity on me and took me on as a site assistant for a month. I obviously impressed them so much they kept me on for over 20 years!

What is the best thing about your job?
Getting to deal with all the artefacts, the variety of tasks, and working with a great bunch of people.

Specialist skills?
Archiving (of course!), getting lost, knitting.

Best site hut biscuit?
The dear departed McVities Jaspers (R.I.P.)

Rachel with her beautifully excavated kiln

Rachel with her beautifully excavated kiln

What is your job role?
Project Archaeologist

How long have you worked for Allen Archaeology?
One year and four months

How would describe your excavation technique?
I used to be very meticulous and it would take me ages to find the edges, now I’m much better with a shovel. So I’d go with fast and furious!

How long have you been working in archaeology?
I had one commercial job before this so it’s coming up to just over two years now

How did you get into archaeology?
One of my teachers at school used to be an archaeologist and I was inspired by the practical side of archaeology, rather than just the bookish nature of history. Having said that I enjoy the multidisciplinary nature of archaeology- there’s a lot to be said for the helpful nature of oral history, as I found out on a site a few weeks ago, when I found house foundations which were missing from the map I had but one of the construction workers had handily lived there a few decades before!

What is the best thing about your job?
It’s hard to pick just one thing, I suppose the initial attraction of the job was the chance of finding something spectacular. I’ve already had some amazing finds, including a Mesolithic flint axe on my first ever commercial site. But I’ve come to realise that I really enjoy learning more about the ordinary people who lived in the settlements that we tend to excavate fully. Seeing how the ditches and pits were a part of living landscape makes me feel like our job is worthwhile.

I also enjoy training people and seeing how even after a couple of days the progress they make; that’s another part of the job I really enjoy.

Specialist skills?
Speedy shovelling and I’m quite good at excavating kilns. I developed these skills working on a site in Norfolk, when I excavated a large percentage of the examples we found!

Best site hut biscuit?
Chocolate hobnobs – you can dunk them in tea/coffee but they’re still satisfying as a speedy snack before heading back out on site!