Friday, Jul 30th

Last update12:48:04 PM GMT

You are here: Home

Time Team Season 2010, Schedule Announced!

The much anticipated 2010 season of Time Team, after a number of false starts, has finally been announced! The first episode will air on Sunday 18 April 17.30-18.30, Channel 4.

In the first episode of the new series Tony Robinson, Professor Mick Aston and the team investigate one of Britain’s greatest historic landmarks - Westminster Abbey. Surrounded by the sights and sounds of Parliament Square, the archaeologists have three days to pin down the location of a lost sacristy, a stronghold which was built by Henry III almost 800 years ago and is said to have housed the biggest collection of treasure this side of the Alps.

Under the watchful eye of the Abbey’s clergy and numerous tourists, the diggers’ attempts to find this important building are continually thwarted by the driving London rain and centuries of later building work.  And by the time the dig reaches the 18th century, surprisingly, the remains of a whole row of houses and workshops built right up against the abbey are uncovered.  The team eventually pick through the later buildings to discover their medieval target only to find it wasn’t what everyone expected. Over three days the team redraw the plan of the magnificent building constructed by Henry III and find tantalising evidence of an even earlier religious settlement - a pair of beautifully preserved thousand year old burials just a metre below the Abbey verge.

Frome Hoard

Frome Hoard

The Portable Antiquities Scheme has today released news of the Frome Hoard, a cache of 52,503 Roman coins dating to the 3rd century, found by metal detectorist Dave Crisp near Frome in Somerset in 201...

CA 243

CA 243

 

It’s been a big month for heritage and with the elections right around the corner, there are certainly more changes on the way. Our lead news story covers the release of the new planning policy state...

Current Archaeology Awards 2010

Current Archaeology Awards 2010

Current Archaeology is pleased to announce the winners of their 2010 awards, presented 27 February 2010, at the British Museum as part of the Archaeology 2010 conference.

 

Mercia

Mercia

The discovery of the hoard in Staffordshire is interesting, for Staffordshire was near the heart of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia.

Preserving Britain's Glories

Preserving Britain's Glories

When Sir Neil Cossons retired as Chairman of English Heritage in June 2007, his farewell party was held in a building overlooking St Pancras Station. This was a fitting venue given the extent of Neil’...

500,000 BC - Boxgrove

500,000 BC - Boxgrove

The man who died half a million years ago.

In a gravel pit at Boxgrove, just outside Chichester, the remains of a man have been discovered, half a million years old. Only a shin bone and two teeth were...

Indefatigable Attenborough

Indefatigable Attenborough

On Monday, 12 October 2009, Sir David Attenborough participated in the Cambridge University Personal-Histories in Archaeology project. I was there, along with a capacity crowd of over 700 guests, to l...

Silchester

On Sunday (25 th July 2010) we went to Silchester to visit the excavations. The University of Reading team have been digging there for fourteen years now and still have four or five years still to run, ...

London 2010

London 2010

 

26 - 28 February, 2010 at the British Museum

Archaeology 2010 brought you all the latest news and views from the archaeological world in a two day conference at the British Museum. It was an amazing l...

Sessions

Sessions

There are two separate venues for the festival; Cardiff University and National Museum Cardiff. It will therefore be necessary to choose a session for the morning and one for the afternoon each day.

Session Schedule

Click here for a PDF of the latest Full schedule, or see below for the shortened version. Click the links for the abstracts of the session:

Visit I Love the Past

Read World Archaeology

Follow us on Twitter

Follow Current Archaeology on Twitter

Join us on Facebook!