Hello! Following recent changes, we have moved our focus towards Bluesky. You can find us there, over at Facebook and Instagram, and through our website.
This account will remain here for the mean time, but will not be actively monitored.
https://t.co/ylFRUiG3ww
Thanks to Clive Bond from the West Norfolk and King's Lynn Archaeological Society for giving an illuminating discussion on his work analysing flint scatters to explore prehistoric landscape occupation.
Entry is free, with donations welcome and all proceeds will go to support the charity (cash preferred for activities).
Car parking is £3 in a nearby field, with parking on site for those with mobility issues, and we have a disabled portaloo (be aware ground is uneven).
Tomorrow (21st July) is the SHARP archaeological festival, There'll be trench tours, and local history groups will be here to discuss their own research.
We also have crafts, poo excavations, trenches to dig and mini battles for the kids, alongside tombolas and raffles.
@broadsgirl We get lots of interest in the Romans, having dug a site at the top of the hill and finding a body in an oven. There is a probable villa that no one's dug before, so would be nice to test, but for me there's a probable early med cemetery that also hasn't been excavated.
An a-moo-zing find has just been discovered by our BERTs today: A fragmented cow skull is slowly emerging out of a colluvial layer which appears to be sealing our Saxon occupation layer.
Sophie will be running a course related to this project next Monday to help train local volunteers to take part in mapping the local area, and will also be at our Festival of Archaeology this Sunday to showcase their work.
https://t.co/JyNFWUDuvq
Thank you to Sophie Tremlett of the Norfolk County Council Air Photo Interpretation Team, who came to give a talk on using aerial photography to discover new archaeologicsl sites, as well as their new @HistoricEngland supported project to explore northwest Norfolk.
One key takeaway, for this admin at least, was that whilst AI has been used to process digital data, a lot of the records themselves are physical objects relying a human to process.
Thank you to Sophie Tremlett of the Norfolk County Council Air Photo Interpretation Team, who came to give a talk on using aerial photography to discover new archaeologicsl sites, as well as their new @HistoricEngland supported project to explore northwest Norfolk.