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Later Prehistoric and Roman Landscapes on the Berkshire Downs (Paperback)
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Later Prehistoric and Roman Landscapes on the Berkshire Downs (Paperback)
Series: British Archaeological Reports British Series
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The aim of this work was to examine land-use and settlement on the
Berkshire Downs from the Bronze Age to the end of the
Romano-British period. Earlier research in this region had
presented a landscape history that was in contrast to elsewhere on
the Wessex chalklands and rather than a land that grew organically
over 2.5 millennia, the area is seen as one which was sporadically
occupied, worked, and possibly abandoned. In the west of the region
late Bronze Age linear ditches mark a major reorganization in the
scale of the landscape, but only a small number of contemporary
settlements are known, and field systems appear to be absent. This
is followed by an apparent hiatus until the establishment of
organised farming communities in the Romano-British period engaged
in large-scale cereal production. In the east, Segsbury Camp is
seen to signal the emergence of early Iron Age occupation into an
area of previously unoccupied and unused land, with later
settlement on the Downs continuing into the late Iron Age. Beyond
this period little is known and the fragmentary field systems in
this region remain undated. It is proposed that these
interpretations are illusory, created by large-scale Romano-British
arable expansion in the west masking earlier occupation, and post
Roman land-use in the east destroying upstanding monuments and
creating a bias in our interpretation. Today, these former
landscapes, some of which survived into the 20th century, are
mostly plough-levelled. As such, further understanding lies beyond
the limit of many conventional fieldwork methods. A
multi-disciplinary approach was used to rebuild this landscape.
Aerial transcription from the National Mapping Programme is used to
provide a view of the landscape before its destruction through
modern agriculture, while maps and documents, lidar, woodland
survey, geophysics and metal detected finds are used to create a
theoretical account of activity across this region.
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