| Issue |
|
J. Phys. IV France
Volume 107,
May 2003
|
|
Page(s)
|
|
319 - 321 |
| DOI |
|
10.1051/jp4:20030306 |
|
J. Phys. IV France
107
(2003)
319
DOI: 10.1051/jp4:20030306
Soil geochemical analyses as an indication of metal working
at the excavation of a house in the Roman City at Silchester (UK)
S.R. Cook1, M. Fulford1, A. Ciarke1 and C. Pearson1
1
The School of Human and Environmental Sciences, The University of Reading, Whiteknights,
Reading RG6 6AB, U.K.
Abstract
Silchesteris the site of a major late Iron Age and Roman town (Calleva Atrebatum), situated in northern
Hampshire (England (UK)) and occupied between the late first century BC and the fifth or sixth century AD.
Extensive evidence of the nature of the buildings and the plan of the town was obtained from excavations undertaken
between 1890 and 1909. The purpose of this study was to use soil geochemical analyses to reinforce the
archaeological evidence particularly with reference to potential metal working at the site Soil analysis has been used
previously to distinguish different functions or land use activity over a site and to aid identification and interpretation
of settlement features (Entwistle et al., 2000).
Samples were taken from two areas of the excavation on a l-metre grid. Firstly from an area of some 500 square
metres from contexts of late first/early second century AD date throughout the entirety of a large "town house"
(House 1) from which there was
prima facie evidence of metalworking.
© EDP Sciences 2003
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