Research Project of the Year 2012

This year the Research Project of the Year 2012 awards went to Massacre at Fin Cop, featured in CA 255.

Iron Age hillforts are commonly viewed as peaceful – if monumental – settlements, statements of prestige and power rather than military fortifications. But harrowing evidence from a Derbyshire site suggests these communities could come to a tragic end, with women and children massacred during the settlement’s destruction.

Clive Waddington, of Archaeological Research Services, accepted the award:

‘We are delighted to win this award – I feel really honoured, particularly because this was a community project and the award highlights that really great research can be carried out with the help of local communities.’

 


This has been another  great year for archaeological research, with fascinating projects going on all over the country. We have really enjoyed following the latest advances in theory, technology and methodology – and we hope you’ve enjoyed reading about them in CA. The following are the projects which particularly captured the imagination of readers and editors alike in the last 12 months, and were nominated in this category:

Silchester: how it all began

(CA 250 – University of Reading)

Rejoining the long-running excavations at Silchester 8 years after our last report, CA learned the investigations had reached a crucial point and the site still had secrets to reveal. Recent investigations have uncovered tantalising clues about the settlement’s pre-Roman past, adding substantially to our picture of how Iron Age Britain became Britannia.


Settlement under the sand

(CA 253 – Oxford University)

Orkney’s Bay of Skaill is best known for being the location of Skara Brae, a Neolithic settlement stunningly-preserved beneath a thick layer of windblown sand. But this is not the only archaeological treasure hidden by the weather; excavations have recently uncovered a massive Norse longhouse 2m below the sand, granting rare insight into the life and death of a major Viking settlement.


Roman rings and the cult of Toutatis

(CA 254 – Adam Daubney, Lincs FLO)

Best known to us from the Asterix comics, Toutatis was a Gaulish god and favourite patron of Roman soldiers who identified him with their war deity Mars. Evidence of Toutatis-worship is seen across the Roman Empire, but strangely limited inBritain. Now a new study of 68 finger-rings inscribed with the god’s name seems set to change all this.


The second radiocarbon revolution

(CA 259 – Alasdair Whittle, Alex Bayliss, and Frances Healy/EH)

In October we covered a breakthrough in dating methodology that promised to rewrite our understanding of the early Neolithic. Exciting advances in radiocarbon dating, permitting more secure chronologies and more precise dates than ever before, allowed a fascinating new research project on causewayed enclosures to be carried out.


Filed Under: Archaeology Awards 2012 Tagged With: [rps]

Comments

  1. Richard Godley says:

    Fincop gets my vote! superb site

  2. Jim Marriott says:

    Fin Cop – awesome story, ‘atmospheric site’ – gets my vote too

  3. John G Wilson says:

    Fin Cop gets my vote too….amazing finds in a superb location.

  4. Keith says:

    Fincop gets my vote! amazing reseach

  5. Matt C says:

    Silchester

  6. Lexxy says:

    Silchester!

  7. Lizzi Hollis says:

    Silchester Undoubtedly!!

  8. LeAnne says:

    Silchester!!

  9. Becca-Jane says:

    Silchester gets my vote!

  10. Helen says:

    Silchester

  11. Cosmo Bacon says:

    silchester

  12. carol daniels says:

    Fin Cop Awesome!

  13. Hazel M says:

    My vote goes to Bay of Skaill, Orkney

  14. Anona says:

    Silchester!

  15. Donald Adamson says:

    I’m going with the Norse longhouse under the sand in Orkney.

  16. Kenny Macrae says:

    An amazing site – the sort of place one always imagines Vikings landing at. What is impressive is that at the end of years of vacation excavation the last dig uncovered this amaxing building – probably only one of a group in the near vicinity. No violence in evidence, just a record of ordinary life.

  17. Polly Dempster says:

    Fincop – inspiring work with great results

  18. Mick S says:

    The Fin Cop dig has shown once and for all that hillforts were places of violent conflict, rather than being an expression of wealth and grandeur as some archaeologists have chosen to portray them. Human nature is to kill and/or enslave other humans. It still goes on today. Nothing changes!

  19. Frank Robinson says:

    A great community research project at Fin Cop

  20. Chris R says:

    Fin Cop. It’s something really different.

  21. Adam Dacey says:

    Fincop all the way – great project, research and interaction with volunteers :)

  22. Joe says:

    Fin Copp

  23. Jo Bloggs says:

    Massacre at Fin Cop. Great article in Current Archaeology

  24. J Bingham says:

    Fin Cop gets my vote !

  25. Matt E says:

    Settlement under the sand. Only the sand could preserve a Viking longhouse so immaculately. Wonderful place, extraordinary dig.

  26. Chris. Waddington says:

    Fin Cop certainly gets my vote. Fascinating research, and with such local involvement too.

  27. Pat Garcia says:

    Settlement under the sand gets my vote. Thank you Pat

  28. Pat Garcia says:

    I would like to vote for Settlement Under Sand as that is a superb site. Thank you.

  29. Mark says:

    Fin Cop is an absolutely brilliant piece of archaeological work

  30. Will R says:

    Settlement Under The Sand – another fantastic find in the Orkney Islands

  31. Rachel says:

    The Second Radiocarbon Revolution

  32. Tony Lyons says:

    Fincop is a winner – its got my vote

  33. Great site with local involvement

  34. Mick and Mary G says:

    Fin Cop

  35. Dorothy Prosser says:

    Fin Cop gets my vote.

  36. Finn Cop Brings the past to life says:

    Finn Cop brings the past to life

  37. L Williamson says:

    Fin Cop, without a doubt

  38. M Athanson says:

    Settlement Under The Sand!

  39. Anthony Haskins says:

    Settlement under the sand. One of the biggest long houses in the British Isle

  40. Pete Stothard says:

    Finn Cop for me everytime

  41. Bob says:

    The second radiocarbon revolution

  42. Diana Walkden says:

    Fin Cop is a fascinating excavation of national significance, with tremendous local involvement.

  43. Maurice Green says:

    Surely, Fin Cop is unique and will lead to further work in limestone geology.

  44. Satu Slater says:

    Such a fascinating project and possibly a start of a delicious debate on the Iron Age Hill Forts and their purpose/function…we’ll see.

  45. Angela K-M says:

    Fin Cop gets my vote!

  46. nicola h says:

    Silchester!

  47. Wayne Easton says:

    The Birsay, Orkney :’Settlement Under The Sand’ I think really deserves to win above all the rest.In the very least for opening a ‘window’ into the effects of relative climate change & it’s effects in northern British/Scottish locations.

  48. K Green says:

    Settlement Under the Sand.

  49. Jackie Mantell says:

    I’m voting for Fin Cop for the way in which it inspired a local community to find out more about their past. Well done!

  50. Ellie Rose Elliott says:

    Settlement under the sand. longhouses do it for me!

  51. Roger Topham says:

    Fincop was a fantastic project with great community involvement.

  52. David Beale says:

    An outstanding piece of work involving so many enthusiastic and dedicated local people – an absolute vote winner

  53. Laura B says:

    My vote goes to the SETTLEMENT UNDER THE SAND! Such a unique location and exceptionally well preserved – definitely deserves to win.

  54. Lyn Murray says:

    Fin Cop for creative involvement of young people.

  55. Charlene G says:

    Settlement Under the Sand – The landscape of Orkney is decorated with remarkably well preserved sites and still manages to hide gems like this. A link that ties the community to another part in the history of their isles.

  56. John Tresadern says:

    Fin Cop gets my vote. This research dig has discovered new and unexpected evidence relating to the Iron Age in Derbyshire. Innovative involvement of children and people of all ages. An absolutely superb presentation of the findings through a filmed re-enactment on site of events by local teenagers, using authentic props and backed by their own original music and poetic composition. Stunning!

  57. Kay says:

    Settlement Under the Sand! An amazing site I was lucky enough to have worked on. A fascinating place in a very complex landscape. Amazing!

  58. ali says:

    Settlement under the sand! :D

  59. maura ward says:

    Fin Cop -fascinating

  60. Anna says:

    Silchester!

  61. Edmund says:

    The Second Radiocarbon revolution gets my vote. This will change the way we think and talk about the past. It is a breakthrough we will still be talking about in 100 years time.

  62. AC says:

    Well i go for…the second radiocarbon revolution…just to be different!

  63. Hazel says:

    Silchester!

  64. Catherine Gleghorn says:

    Silchester!

  65. Mike R says:

    Silchester – huge and log-running project, consistent enthusiastic leadership, invaluable finds and excellent scholarship!

  66. richard bond says:

    Silchester people-development and research dig just has to be one of the best….

  67. Ewan says:

    Settlement under the Sand. It had locals digging, drew in everyone who lived round about and did brilliant tours of the most amazingly preserved archaeology. The smithing ovens, benches and other stone furniture were great.

  68. Lynda Baird says:

    ~I believe Daniel Griffiths is the winner here

  69. penelope newsome says:

    Settlement under the Sand:
    I did a bit of volunteering with Jane Harrison and David Griffiths on the East Oxford Archaeology project at Bartlemas Chapel. I was very impressed by their efficiency and their skills in organising this quite difficult project all around a still functioning chapel and with a large variety of participants as well. Some exciting finds were made and are being carefully conserved and documented.

    I am sure Jane and David’s Orkneys project will be extremely interesting and rewarding; and, especially given the distance too (sadly I can’t volunteer up there!),it deserves enthusiastic support.

  70. Joyce Yowler says:

    Settlement under the sand is my choice!

  71. Jane Harrison says:

    Please vote for Settlement under the sand, a mammoth effort from a great team over many years, surely deserves to win the award.

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