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Posts by 'Rewilding' Later Prehistory Project

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We're delighted that Dr Anwen Cooper, who heads the @rewildarch.bsky.social project, will be delivering this year's de Cardi lecture for the @archaeologyuk.bsky.social AGM!

📍 The Milner York
📅 21st February | 12:20
🎟️ FREE

Read more about the AGM and how to book tickets here: tr.ee/CBA-AGM

2 months ago 12 6 0 0
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We brought the wild with us 🐾 to last week’s Bronze Age Forum!
Grateful to our hosts @ucddublin.bsky.social for an engaging programme and warm welcome! #Archaeology #BronzeAgeForum #WilderPasts

4 months ago 5 1 0 0
People and time in nature: Positioning archaeology in an ecoclimate crisis | Archaeological Dialogues | Cambridge Core People and time in nature: Positioning archaeology in an ecoclimate crisis

🚀 New open‑access article! “People and time in nature: Positioning archaeology in an ecoclimate crisis.”
🔗 www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

#OpenAccess #Archaeology #ClimateCrisis #WildWednesdays

5 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Archaeology in Wilding @ Knepp

What happens when archaeology meets rewilding? 🦴🌿
Our recent 'Archaeology in Wilding' workshop @kneppwilding.bsky.social explored how nature recovery and archaeology can thrive together.

Read the story here 👉 www.oxfordarchaeology.com/news/archaeo...

@oxfordarchaeology.bsky.social @wildwednesdays

6 months ago 6 2 0 0
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Great to meet such a diverse and lively group of archaeologists, ecologists, farmers, geographers etc at our 'Archaeology in Wilding' workshop earlier this month. Thank you @kneppwilding.bsky.social for the beautiful venue, Guerilla Archaeology and all others who contributed! #WildWednesdays

6 months ago 4 1 0 2
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Last week we were on the road again at the International Working Group for Palaeoethnobotany, Groningen. Topics ranged from experimental pit storage, prehistoric food crusts, community-designed Roman gardens & wild plant fibres & recipes-looking forward to IWGP Berlin 2028! #WildWednesdays

8 months ago 3 0 0 0
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The project team have been out and about quite a bit lately, but here's our most professional looking photo of Lou assessing stored monolith samples from the 1980s Fenland Survey project! Fingers crossed they deliver the goods! #WildWednesdays #Archaeology #HardCoreLife

10 months ago 3 0 0 0
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Rewilding Later Prehistory visited beautiful Rewilding Coombeshead last week and discovered a talent for pig whispering! #WildWednesdays

11 months ago 5 0 0 0
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What can be happier than zooarchaeologists among red deer?? Adrienne shared this great photo from their ‘road trip’ to collect reference material at @kneppwilding.bsky.social -including Tamworth pig remains (a better match for archaeological pig than our modern breeds) #WildWednesdays #Archaeology

11 months ago 3 0 0 0
Series 5 Episode 2 Archaeologists Rose and Anwen | Tree Amble Rose, Anwen and I met at a farming conference and very quickly hit it off. We were all wondering why a tree lover and two archaeologists would spend a weekend talking about mob grazing and soils. Yet ...

Project lead Anwen Cooper and archaeologist and artist Rose Ferraby chat to Pete Leeson about nature, farming and archaeology in the latest @treeamblepodcast
Check it out here: shorturl.at/6DzSy
#WildWednesdays #archaeology #naturerecovery @oxfordarchaeology.bsky.social

1 year ago 4 0 0 0
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The fish bones found in this Later Bronze/Iron Age burial from Stanground, Peterborough came from a pike of estimated 1m length, but are they trash or treasure?
A fish of this considerable size may well have been considered a worthy funerary offering (ref: Boismier 2021) #WildWednesdays #Archaeology

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Thwing, 2009. A screen print by Rose Ferraby. The composition features a mix of geometric and organic shapes. A large, elongated, triangular shape dominates the centre, and is textured to echo the steep sided valleys of the Yorkshire Wolds with a mix of dots, lines, and solid areas. Other shapes include rectangles, circles, and free-form elements. The image has a layered quality and different textures and colours have been applied in stages. The primary colors are various shades of green, ranging from light pastel to darker, more saturated tones. These are contrasted with a soft, warm beige background. A few small elements are rendered in white and a dark, almost black, line.
A circular motif in the upper right corner consists of a series of concentric rings resonant of barrows in plan form.  The image has a calm, contemplative quality due to its soft colors and abstract composition. The use of texture and layering adds visual interest and depth.

Thwing, 2009. A screen print by Rose Ferraby. The composition features a mix of geometric and organic shapes. A large, elongated, triangular shape dominates the centre, and is textured to echo the steep sided valleys of the Yorkshire Wolds with a mix of dots, lines, and solid areas. Other shapes include rectangles, circles, and free-form elements. The image has a layered quality and different textures and colours have been applied in stages. The primary colors are various shades of green, ranging from light pastel to darker, more saturated tones. These are contrasted with a soft, warm beige background. A few small elements are rendered in white and a dark, almost black, line. A circular motif in the upper right corner consists of a series of concentric rings resonant of barrows in plan form. The image has a calm, contemplative quality due to its soft colors and abstract composition. The use of texture and layering adds visual interest and depth.

From the archives:

Ferraby, R. 2017 Geophysics: creativity and the archaeological imagination, Internet Archaeology 44. doi.org/10.11141/ia.... 🏺
Rose explores archaeology as a creative practice by engaging specifically with the processes and visuals of geophysics.

1 year ago 30 10 1 1
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Resident geoarchaeologist Dave Kay has been out in the sunshine at @kneppwilding.bsky.social looking at the effects of rewilding on soil structure - accompanied by the usually pretty elusive ponies! #WildWednesdays

1 year ago 0 1 0 0

Tonight!!! See link below 👇

1 year ago 13 5 0 0
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Cattle grazing by the River Adur, with Knepp Castle ruin in the background

Cattle grazing by the River Adur, with Knepp Castle ruin in the background

A distant view of two fallow deer by a pond of recent origin

A distant view of two fallow deer by a pond of recent origin

A beaver dam on the edge of woodland, holding back the water behind it

A beaver dam on the edge of woodland, holding back the water behind it

Three Tamworth pigs sleeping next to a tree

Three Tamworth pigs sleeping next to a tree

For #WorldRewildingDay, some pictures from a recent visit to @kneppwilding.bsky.social - the animals roam a landscape that looks very different from its more agricultural days but is nevertheless still shaped by historic patterns of routeways, boundaries and structures

1 year ago 25 3 0 0
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How do we imagine human’s place in nature in prehistory? Most reconstructions center on settlements, with nature fading into the backdrop, a hazy periphery. This image of Grim’s Bank by Peter Lorimer takes a different approach, as a woman in the countryside looks on from outside #WildWednesdays

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
Anwen Cooper talking and gesticulating, with a large wooden fish trap in the foreground.

Anwen Cooper talking and gesticulating, with a large wooden fish trap in the foreground.

The interior of a wooden eel trap, with circular lines of weaving, tying lengths of wood together.

The interior of a wooden eel trap, with circular lines of weaving, tying lengths of wood together.

A stack of books including (top to bottom) Ladybird ‘Stone Age Man in Britain’, Jake Fiennes ‘Land Healer’, Jacquetta Hawkes ’A Land’, Jacquetta Hawkes ‘Early Britain’, Nick Hayes and Jon Moses (eds) ‘Wild Service’, and Isabella Tree ‘Wilding’.

A stack of books including (top to bottom) Ladybird ‘Stone Age Man in Britain’, Jake Fiennes ‘Land Healer’, Jacquetta Hawkes ’A Land’, Jacquetta Hawkes ‘Early Britain’, Nick Hayes and Jon Moses (eds) ‘Wild Service’, and Isabella Tree ‘Wilding’.

Detail of a model wattle hurdle with a museum label (MERL 68/100).

Detail of a model wattle hurdle with a museum label (MERL 68/100).

Amazing ‘Voices’ gallery tour @themerl.bsky.social today with the brilliant Anwen Cooper from @oxfordarchaeology.bsky.social / @rewildarch.bsky.social, discussing rewilding, early farming, more-than-human histories and prehistories, @kneppwilding.bsky.social, and much more!

1 year ago 28 5 0 1
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Ancient Drinking Culture: The Langstone Tankard . . . In December 2007, Craig Mills discovered a complete wooden tankard while metal-...

Anyone for a pint? The roughly 2000 year old Langstone Tankard is one of several examples of Iron Age/Roman tankards made of (potentially toxic) yew wood.
It can hold four pints, so if the taxins don't finish you off, the ale might do!
museum.wales/articles/120...
#WildWednesdays #Archaeology

1 year ago 17 2 0 0
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We have several more upcoming talks, including alongside a stellar line-up at the 'Where the Wild Things Were' rewilding symposium in Lifton, Devon 🐻🐌🐸🦅
www.ticketsource.co.uk/keep-it-wild...
See also our website: rewilding.oxfordarchaeology.com/publications...
#WildWednesdays #Archaeology #Ecology

1 year ago 3 0 0 0
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Artist Miranda Creswell has been out at @kneppwilding.bsky.social and shared these lovely working shots with us on the theme of ‘What lies beyond’- bringing together the past and present, visible and invisible 😍😍😍
#WildWednesdays #Archaeology #Ecology

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
A view facing south down the Lye Valley Fen walkway in Oxford. The raised walkway bisects two areas of sloping valley fen with short green winter vegetation on its surface. Two people stand on the walkway facing the camera.

A view facing south down the Lye Valley Fen walkway in Oxford. The raised walkway bisects two areas of sloping valley fen with short green winter vegetation on its surface. Two people stand on the walkway facing the camera.

Project palynologist Lou has been out at Lye Valley Fen, hearing about the challenges faced in rescuing alkaline fen and its underlying peat when surrounded by urban conurbation - as outlined by expert ecologist and palynologist, Judy Webb #WildWednesdays #Archaeoecology

1 year ago 3 1 0 0
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Antler rake/pick from Early Bronze Age pit at Moulsford, excavated by TVAS. Found alongside other remains including aurochs, amphibian & cattle. Molluscs suggest the pit was dug shortly after surrounding woodland was cleared. Perhaps returning to the earth some of what had been taken?#WildWednesdays

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
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The Essay - EarthWorks - Stone - BBC Sounds Archaeologist Rose Ferraby explores rock art in Northumberland.

Rose Ferraby and project PI Anwen Cooper head to Hepple Wilds in Northumberland in search of prehistoric rock art and landscape connection on Monday’s episode of BBC Radio 3's ‘The Essay’- check it out here! www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
#WildWednesdays #Archaeology #Prehistory

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
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Continental influx and pervasive matrilocality in Iron Age Britain - Nature An analysis of ancient mitochondrial and nuclear DNA shows evidence of matrilocal communities in Iron Age Britain.

All about understanding Matrilineal society in what is now Britain. Brilliant and careful work using multi disciplinary research
www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 year ago 5 1 0 1
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Excavated in 1960, this Early Bronze Age barrow burial at Amesbury contained a number of wood, antler and bronze implements including an oak 'club' or beater. These were interpreted as the toolkit of a leather worker, but perhaps other interpretations are possible?
#WildWednesdays #Archaeology

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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A beautiful shot of (?Ceratodon purpureus) moss at Fountains Abbey by @roseferraby. Heathland mosses can often be identified in prehistoric samples, such as those from this Early Bronze Age turf-built burial mound at Pen-y-Fan, at the highest point of the Brecon Beacons. #WildWednesdays #Archaeology

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Some yuletide (archaeo)botany to send you on your way: Iron Age mistletoe fragments from Wardy Hill Ringwork, Ely &
a recent article on the UK's big mistletoe 'comeback' (possibly thanks to warmer winters & the Eurasian blackcap!)
shorturl.at/vEEUC #WildWednesdays #Archaeobotany #Archaeology

1 year ago 11 5 0 0

A great conference session filled with fascinating talks on the archaeology of wolves, falconry birds, deer, pigeons, rabbits, puffins and much more - big thanks to the conference speakers! @oxfordarchaeology.bsky.social

1 year ago 6 0 1 0
A shallow clay vessel with three clay birds attached to the inside.

A shallow clay vessel with three clay birds attached to the inside.

Another personal highlight from today‘s museum visit: a Late Bronze Age bowl with three waterbirds. When filled, the birds would have appeared to swim. Birds are highly important symbols in LBA religion.
Klein Döbbern, 10th-9th century BC. Archäologisches Landesmuseum Brandenburg. #archaeology

1 year ago 302 58 6 7
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