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E-raamat: Bronze Age barrow and pit alignments at Upton Park, south of Weedon Road, Northampton

  • Formaat: 116 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2023
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-13: 9781803276236
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  • Formaat: 116 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2023
  • Kirjastus: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • ISBN-13: 9781803276236
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MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) was commissioned by RPS Group PLC, on behalf of Morris Homes, to undertake archaeological work on land at Upton Park south of Weedon Road, Northampton.













Two adjacent palaeochannels crossed the western extent of the site and are likely to have dated to the Pleistocene period. The earliest evidence of human activity consisted of a background scatter of Neolithic flint. The first feature was an isolated barrow that was established in the early Bronze Age. A later unurned cremation was cut into the backfill of the recut ditch and radiocarbon dated to the end of the early Bronze Age or the beginning of the middle Bronze Age. At least one isolated early Bronze Age pit was found in another part of the site.













Parts of two late Bronze Age/early Iron Age sinuous pit alignments were recorded over nearly 0.5km within the site with c257 pits revealed. An estimated 66% of these pits by volume were examined. This is the first time in the county since Wollaston Quarry in the 1990s that pit alignments were seen over such a distance within a single planning application. The archaeological excavation of these has resulted in them being by some distance the two most examined pit alignments in the county, if not the region. Both had most likely fallen out of use by the early Iron Age, but a middle Iron Age date should not be ruled out. In the northern and southern pit alignments there were 16 and seven areas respectively where there were different variables in the pits such as circular or rectangular plan form (and some pit areas had be recut by ditches), which may suggest they had been constructed and maintained by different gangs/communities over probably hundreds of years.













Relatively little detailed work has been recorded on this enigmatic feature type. The extensive work and examination of the two pit alignments at Upton has allowed a typology of the variable areas of pits (and related ditches) to be postulated. A detailed discussion has compared these features in a local, regional and national context. Future recommendations for excavation of pit alignments have been recorded.













A Roman trackway lay within the western part of the development area and it was part of the routeway network located around the nearby Duston Roman town. Medieval drainage ditches and field systems relating to part of the medieval settlement of Upton lay within the eastern part of the development area.
Chapter 1 Introduction


Project background


Location and topography


Geological background by Steve Critchley


Historical and archaeological background


Archaeological investigations within and close to the site


Objectives and methodology


Site phasing


 


Chapter 2 The archaeological evidence


Period 1: Palaeochannel


Period 2: Neolithic (c4000BC 2500BC)


Period 3: Early to early middle Bronze Age (c2500BC 1500BC)


Period 4: Late Bronze Age to early middle Iron Age (c1100BC 400BC)


Period 5: Roman (AD43 AD400)


Period 6: Medieval to post-medieval


Period 7: Modern


 


Chapter 3 Finds


Worked Flint by Yvonne Wolframm-Murray


Bronze Age pottery by Andy Chapman


Iron Age and Roman pottery by Adam Sutton


Post-Roman pottery by Jennifer R McNulty


Small finds by Tora Hylton


Radiocarbon dating


 


Chapter 4 Human, faunal and environmental evidence


Cremated human remains by Chris Chinnock


Animal bone by Adam Reid


Environmental analysis by Sander Aerts


 


Chapter 5 Discussion


Period 2: Neolithic (c4000BC 2500BC)


Period 3: Early to early/middle Bronze Age (c2500BC - 1100BC)


Period 4: Late Bronze Age to early Iron Age pit alignments (c1100 400BC)


Recommendations for excavation of pit alignments


Period 5: Roman (AD43 AD410)


 


Bibliography
Yvonne Wolframm-Murray graduated from Bradford University in Archaeological Sciences and then immediately studied for and then achieved a PhD in 2005 at the same university. She has worked for MOLA (formerly Northamptonshire Archaeology) since 2005 and amongst other sites supervised parts of the excavations at Stanground. She has written many site reports as well as specialists reports on worked flint. Yvonne has published articles in journals and has contributed to monographs.