The first phase of the Trypillia mega-sites' methodological revolution began in 1971 with aerial photography, magnetic prospection, and archaeological excavations of huge settlements of hundreds of hectares belonging to the Trypillia culture in Ukraine. Since 2009, we have created a second phase of the methodological revolution in studies of Trypillia mega-sites, which has provided more significant advances in our understanding of these large sites than any other single research development in the last three decades, thanks partly to the participation of joint Ukrainian-foreign teams. In this paper, we outline the main aspects of the second phase, using examples from the Anglo-Ukrainian project 'Early urbanism in prehistoric Europe: the case of the Trypillia mega-sites', working at Nebelivka (also spelled 'Nebilivka'), and the Ukrainian-German project 'Economy, demography and social space of Trypillia mega-sites', working at Taljanky ('Talianki'), Maydanetske ('Maydanetskoe'), and Dobrovody, as well as the smaller site at Apolianka.
The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that:• a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in DRO • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders.Please consult the full DRO policy for further details. Following the ending of the cold war, the Royal Air Force station at Catterick in North Yorkshire was identified as being surplus to requirements. At the same time the Army was seeking extra accommodation in the Catterick area for units withdrawn from Germany. The station was therefore transferred to Land Command in 1994 and renamed 'Marne Barracks'. In 1999 the Ministry of Defence (MoD) commissioned an Establishment Development Plan (EDP) for the Barracks, to guide its long-term expansion and redevelopment. A key recommendation of the EDP was the need to undertake a programme of non-intrusive and intrusive archaeological investigations, which Archaeological Services Durham University were commissioned to undertake in 2000-2 (Archaeological Services 2001a 2001b;.In 2003 a planning proposal was submitted for the development of a large area of the former airfield for accommodation blocks for service personnel. Part of this area had already been assessed as being of high archaeological potential due to the presence of Bronze Age, Iron Age, and post-medieval ditches, its proximity to a scheduled monument, and the depth of burial of the old ground surface during landscaping of the airfield in the 1930s (Archaeological Services 2002). It was recognised that the proposed development had the potential to disturb significant archaeological remains, even though the presence of the Neolithic enclosure was not known at the time, and since further development of the site might be requested in due course the MoD requested full archaeological excavation of the entire 11 hectare development area rather than just the footprints of the proposed new buildings. Archaeological Services Durham University undertook the excavation in September-November 2004. LOCATION, TOPOGRAPHY AND GEOLOGYMarne Barracks is situated immediately south of Catterick village in North Yorkshire, bounded to the west by the A1(T) road and to the east by the River Swale (Fig. 1). The 2004 excavation covered an area to the north-east of the former runway centred on NGR: SE 2510 9695.The land within the barracks is predominantly flat with a mean elevation of c. 53 m aOD. An exception to this is Castle Hills to the north-east of the development site, a low natural hill modified by earthworks so that it raises c. 15 m above the surrounding ground level. The general flatness of the area has been accentuated by levelling of the airfield during the 1930s. Cut and fill operations were used to create a more level surface for an improved runw...
The Early Iron Age enclosures and associated sites on Sutton Common on the western edge of the Humberhead Levels contain an exceptional variety of archaeological data of importance not only to the region but for the study of later prehistory in the British Isles. Few other later prehistoric British sites outside the East Anglian fens and the Somerset Levels have thus far produced the quantity and quality of organically preserved archaeological materials that have been found, despite the small scale of the investigations to date. The excavations have provided an opportunity to integrate a variety of environmental analyses, of wood, pollen, beetles, waterlogged and carbonised plant remains, and of soil micromorphology, to address archaeological questions about the character, use, and environment of this Early Iron Age marsh fort. The site is comprised of a timber palisaded enclosure and a succeeding multivallate enclosure linked to a smaller enclosure by a timber alignment across a palaeochannel, with associated finds ranging in date from the Middle Bronze Age to the Roman and medieval periods. Among the four adjacent archaeological sites is an Early Mesolithic occupation site, also with organic preservation, and there is a Late Neolithic site beneath the large enclosure. Desiccation throughout the common is leading to the damage and loss of wooden and organic remains. It is hoped that the publication of these results, of investigations between 1987 and 1993, will lead to a fuller investigation taking place.
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