
DigVentures - archaeology in your hands

With the Flag Fen Lives project,
DigVentures is launching Europe’s first-ever crowd-funded and
crowd-sourced archaeological excavation.
We’re running the project through a fantastic partner, Sponsume,
who will help us manage the campaign. Our funding window will be open
29th February – April 2012, during which time we need to raise £25,000,
to fund our excavation this summer. Back us now!
We
will be building a community with archaeology at its heart: our funding
‘Venturers’ will be a part of the project from start to finish. The
only difference will be the benefit level that you purchase.
Starting at the £10 level,
you will have a ‘backstage’ pass to the Site Hut, a password-protected
area on our website offering daily updates on the project, and loads of
original content including apps, blogs, on site streaming, interviews,
lectures from archaeological superstars, photos, finds news and more.
This access is for the duration of one year, until the 2013 season gets
underway next April.
The field school at Flag Fen (for those who purchase a benefit at £125
and above) will be really exciting this year. We’ve put a lot of
thinking into making this the best experience possible, whether you are
digging for a day, a week, two weeks, or the whole project. There will
be dedicated staff providing orientation, training and instruction, as
well as evening lectures, fun outings and plenty of time for questions.
And some surprises, of course!
Places in the field school (from 23rd July – 12th August 2012) are limited and will be available on a first-come, first-served basis, and are only for those aged 17 and older.
What do I do?
Pick a benefit level and purchase!
Tell your friends and everyone you know, and ask them to get involved
too. You can also purchase benefits as a gift for someone else: don’t we
all know someone who has a bit of a geeky fascination with archaeology?
Send them our way! The more people who get involved, the more work we
can do. And this year isn’t the end – the site is drying out fast, and
we need to keep the work going. Planning for the 2013 season is already
underway…
Located just outside of Peterborough, Flag Fen
has a vibrant history and is internationally acknowledged as one of the
most important Bronze Age sites in the world. Due to extensive drainage
and development of the surrounding area, the archaeology is in jeopardy.
It is estimated that a large part of the site will be lost within the
next 20 years if work is not carried out now.
Flag Fen
was discovered in 1982 by Francis Pryor MBE, during a project to
complete a dyke survey for English Heritage. It’s a classic story along
the lines of how so many truly amazing sites are found: through chance, a
bit of a stumble, and a lot of luck. But from the moment he picked up
that first piece of pointed, shaped wood – showing clear tool marks made
by an axe roughly 1.5 inches wide – Francis knew that he had found
something special. It would take him years to untangle the archaeology
at Flag Fen, and what it might have meant to the ancient people who
built it.
The Site
The Flag Fen basin is
an area of low-lying land on the western margin of the Fens, just
south-east of Peterborough. To the east and west, the land gently rises
and is flood-free. The eastern dry land is known as Fengate, and the
west as Northey. In the middle lies Flag Fen, where peats began to form
in the increasingly wet environment, around 2000 BC.
The
archaeology of the area has been studied in detail, but our focus in on
what began to happen at Flag Fen in the Middle Bronze Age (c. 1300 BC),
when farmers in the Fengate and Northey area began to experience
difficulty in their fields with increasing wetness from rising water
levels.
A causeway, built of timber, was driven across Flag Fen,
linking the two areas of higher and drier ground. This causeway, known
as a post alignment, was constructed of large posts arranged in five
rows. Between the posts, timbers were built up horizontally, which
provided the surface for transportation. Closer to the Northey side of
the causeway, an artificial timber platform was constructed, the purpose
of which is yet to be fully revealed.
We do know that some part
of the purpose of this platform must have been ceremonial, however, as
the area around it has produced thousands of finds, including metal,
stone, shale, ceramic and other objects, along with cuts of meat, food
and perishable items. These items were placed in the water around the
platform deliberately, with many showing evidence of having been broken
or damaged prior to placement in the water.
The last timbers of
the post alignment and platform were added approximately 900 BC, but the
site continued to be visited throughout the Iron Age. One of the most
important aspects of the archaeology at Flag Fen is the preservation
environment created by the peats. Many items of leather and wood were
kept in nearly pristine condition by the lack of oxygen in the peat, and
thus the artefacts are an incredibly important and unique record of
Bronze Age life.
Flag Fen Today
Flag Fen
is open to the public, and makes for a fantastic visit back to the
Bronze Age. The site has a Museum, which displays many of the artefacts
found on site, including the famous Flag Fen shears
and the oldest wheel in England. Additionally, you can visit the
Preservation Hall, which shows a 10m section of the excavated timbers,
and is the only place in Europe where it is possible to view this kind
of archaeological remains. There is also an extensive archaeological
park, including two reconstructed roundhouses, a section of Roman road,
gardens and – beginning in July 2012 – the DigVentures excavations.
The
2012 fieldwork season can best be described as an evaluation – a chance
to take stock of the site archive, and assess through targeted
excavation precisely how much the site has deteriorated since its last
investigation.
If we are successful in funding this season’s
essential work, the results will be used to develop a major five-year
project design, encompassing research and excavation. This season’s work
is therefore the first phase in what we are hoping will be a four-phase
programme, designed to ensure the site lives up to its future research
potential.
Our research design for this season is being developed
in consultation with Vivacity and a project management group, and is
based on the three core principles underlying our ‘Flag Fen Lives’ project:
- To bring the Flag Fen Archaeology Park to life by making live excavation the beating pulse of the visitor experience whilst building a new global online audience.
- To
provide detailed scientific information on the preservation environment
at Flag Fen to assess the long-term sustainability and life of the monument in the face of drainage, farming and development impacts.
- To understand the past lives
of the people who inhabited the Flag Fen basin – how their social
identity (aspects such as status, kinship, ethnicity or gender) may have
been influenced by living and working in such a dynamic landscape, and
how this in turn conditioned their response to long-term environmental
change.
These principles have been refined into much
more specific project aims and objectives for this season’s work. We
will use a number of different archaeological techniques to fulfill
these objectives, such as:
- An auger survey, to define the edge of the Flag Fen timber platform
- Test pits, to assess the condition of the waterlogged wood and the impact of de-watering
- Evaluation trenches, to define the profile and location of the edge of Northey Island and establish a coherent deposit model
- GPS survey, to map all previously excavated features and trenches into a new site plan
- GIS archive digitisation, to digitally enhance the plans and drawings that were saved from the museum fire in January 2000
- Palaeoenvironmental
sampling and on-site processing, to assess the potential for a
multi-disciplinary palaeoenvironmental research strategy.
If you are new to archaeology, don’t worry if you don’t immediately understand the technical details of all this.
Whether you’re digging with us for a day, a week or longer, we will do
our best to explain the background reasoning to everything we do, as
well as teach the basic archaeological skills you will need to work on
site. You will be contributing both funds and hands-on support to
archaeologists undertaking a genuine, internationally important
research project.
The DVIPs lecture programme is one of the things
we are most excited about! As an added value to the field school, we
have arranged for some of the biggest names in archaeology to deliver an
evening lecture on their chosen subject. The speakers will join us on
site during the day, and also share dinner with us after their lecture.
We may even be able to convince one or two to camp with us! Our list of
DVIP's so far includes the following (with more to be confirmed soon!)
Dr Francis Pryor, author and excavator of Flag Fen
Prof Martin Carver, Editor, Antiquity and Professor Emeritus, University of York
Dr John Gater, Geophysicist, GSB Prospection and Time Team
NB: this lecture will include a geophys masterclass during the day.
Dr Will Fletcher, English Heritage inspector of ancient monuments for Norfolk
Julian Richards FSA MIFA,Archaeologist and writer, presenter of BBC’ s Meet the Ancestors
Professor Vince Gaffney, Chair in Landscape Archaeology and Geomatics, University of Birmingham
Professor Timothy Darvill, Bournemouth University
Dr Benjamin Roberts, Curator, European Bronze Age, the British Museum
Mark Knight, Senior Project Officer, Cambridge Archaeological Unit
Clive Waddington, Managing Director, Archaeological Research Services Ltd
Gerard Twomey and Graeme Young, Bamburgh Research Project
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Détails de la chambre et pension
Accès au site
Horaire:
- 8:00 Breakfast and orientation
- 9:00 Work begins
- 11:00 Elevensies
- 1:00 Lunch
- 3:30 Tea break
- 5:30 End of work
- 6:30 DVIP lecture or optional activity
- 8:00 Dinner
Formation archéologique offerte
- Test pits, to assess the condition of the waterlogged wood and the impact of de-watering
- Evaluation trenches, to define the profile and location of the edge of Northey Island and establish a coherent deposit model
- GPS survey, to map all previously excavated features and trenches into a new site plan
- GIS archive digitisation, to digitally enhance the plans and drawings that were saved from the museum fire in January 2000
There are various other things happening on site at Flag Fen this summer (you’ll have to wait until the announcement in April!), which will also provide opportunities for our Venturers to gain more experience in areas such as museum development, collections processing, education, and more.
Détails
The DigVentures field school at Flag Fen will be your chance to dig alongside some of the most experienced field archaeologists in the world. In addition to Time Team’s Raksha Dave, who will be the Project Manager and head of the field school, we’ve assembled a team of top-notch Bronze Age and wetlands archaeology specialists, who will be able to explain everything about the history, environment, conditions and artefacts at Flag Fen.
We have also arranged a unique programme of evening lectures, called the DVIPs, which will bring archaeological superstars to site to give presentations, have dinner with us, and possibly even join us in the trenches. On the evenings that we don’t have lectures, there will be optional activities or free time.
Activités organisées
The DVIPs lecture programme is one of the things we are most excited about! As an added value to the field school, we have arranged for some of the biggest names in archaeology to deliver an evening lecture on their chosen subject. The speakers will join us on site during the day, and also share dinner with us after their lecture. We may even be able to convince one or two to camp with us! Our list of DVIP's so far includes the following (with more to be confirmed soon!)
Restriction au voyagement personnel
Autres Informations utiles:
Info contact
Managing Director
Lisa Westcott Wilkins
Unit 1, The Royal Oak
Lee Church Street
London
info@digventures.com
@TheDigVenturers
00 44 (0) 20 8333 5770
Lectures recommandées
Further reading:
Pryor, F. M. M., 1991. Flag Fen Prehistoric Fenland Centre. Batsford, London
Pryor, F. M. M., 1998. Farmers in Prehistoric Britain. Tempus, Stroud.
Pryor F, 2001. The Flag Fen Basin: Archaeology and environment of a Fenland Landscape. English Heritage, UK.
Pryor F, and M Bamforth,. 2010 (eds), Flag Fen, Peterborough, Excavation and Research 1995-2007. Oxbow, Oxford.

