Current Archaeology 412

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Highlights:

From the Editor:
Almost a decade ago, I stood on a viewing platform at Must Farm in Cambridgeshire, spellbound by the Bronze Age settlement spread before me. We first featured its astonishing archaeology in CA 312, so it feels fitting that it is issue 412 that returns to this unique site now that analysis has been published in full.

Still in Cambridgeshire, our next feature explores thought-provoking research into medieval cemeteries, asking: when faced with uniform ranks of anonymous skeletons, how do you restore their individuality? We then travel to the famous White Cliffs of Dover, where long-buried Second World War sites are being brought to light once more.

Returning to prehistoric matters, we next trace Professor Keith Ray’s journey from Preseli to Salisbury Plain, walking more than 200 miles in the wake of the Stonehenge bluestones. Chris Catling and I were among the 20 lucky ‘co-walkers’ invited to spend a day with Keith during his travels – here Chris explores the initiative’s broader themes, while I add a few memories of its final stretch.

Speaking of adventures, Deputy Editor Kathryn has gone on maternity leave. I hope you will join me in wishing her all the best, and welcoming Rebecca Preedy, who is covering her role – and who heroically held the fort while I disappeared on honeymoon for most of May (hence the change to my usual photo: Simon and I were married on the Bluebell Railway in Sussex at the end of April), with the much-appreciated support of Amy, our Editorial Assistant. Thanks, both!


Cover Date: Jul-2024, Volume 35 Issue 4

Cover Story

Must Farm revisited: Extraordinary insights into everyday Bronze Age life Between 2015 and 2016, Cambridge Archaeological Unit excavated Britain’s most completely preserved prehistoric settlement outside Whittlesey, near Peterborough. As a time-capsule of late Bronze Age life, Must Farm is unique;…

Features

Gone, but not forgotten: Personalising the anonymous medieval dead Medieval cemeteries often contain individuals whose names have been lost to history, buried in strikingly uniform ways. How can we…
Excavations over the White Cliffs of Dover: Uncovering the Second World War story of Fan Bay and its surroundings As we mark the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings this month, Carly Hilts reports on a visit to Fan…
Stepping stones: Travelling on the trail of the Stonehenge bluestones Professor Keith Ray completed his 222-mile journey from the Preseli Hills to Stonehenge on Sunday 21 April. Carly Hilts joined…
Rolling stones From the Preseli Hills of Wales to the site of Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain is 120 miles as the crow…

Comment

Sherds CA 412 A new organisation has come into being in Wales, in a bold move designed to increase the capacity of the…
Excavating the CA archive In my columns to date I have barely mentioned Stonehenge. This is deliberate: for all that I worship archaeology, I…

News

Views

Finds Tray – Glass bead This glass bead was a surface find by a metal-detectorist in Wanston. It is an example of an ‘eye’ bead,…
Current Archaeology’s June Listings: exhibitions, events, and heritage from home There are many great archaeological events coming up this summer, from festivals and conferences to new exhibitions and recently reopened…
Go digging! Following on from our coverage in CA 410 and 411, this selection of summer digging opportunities includes projects in Staffordshire,…
Seeing the invisible: Stonehenge, Wiltshire For more than a decade, Adam Stanford and English Heritage have periodically recorded the parch marks that appear at Stonehenge…
CA 412 Letters – June Your thoughts on issues raised by CA.
Perth Museum CA profiles the new Perth Museum, which opened at the end of March.
Museum news The latest on acquisitions, exhibitions, and key decisions
The British Society of Master Glass Painters As the name suggests, this was originally a guild-like society, founded in 1921 by professional stained-glass artists to promote good…

Reviews

The Britannias: An island quest REVIEW BY ANNE MITCHELL Alice Albinia spent some weeks at the Ness of Brodgar in 2017, and she writes of…
The archaeology of wild birds in Britain and Ireland REVIEW BY JULIA BEST This engaging volume explores human interactions with birds from the end of the last Ice Age…
Iron Age Wetland Deposition: Case studies from Wales and Scotland REVIEW BY GRAEME CAVERS This volume comprises an assessment of the evidence for Iron Age object deposition from two study…
Death in Irish prehistory REVIEW BY EILEEN MURPHY Exploring the mortuary record for Ireland from 8000 BC to AD 400, Death in Irish Prehistory…
Evolution of a Romano-British Courtyard Villa: excavations at the former Dings Crusaders Rugby Ground, Stoke Gifford, 2016-2018 REVIEW BY TONY WILMOTT This volume describes the archaeology of some four centuries of the life of a rural farm/villa…

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