1982
DOI: 10.1017/s0079497x00008410
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The Shaugh Moor Project: Fourth Report — Environment, Context and Conclusion

Abstract: For five years from 1976 to 1980 the archaeology and environment of a block of landscape centred around Shaugh Moor on south-west Dartmoor were analysed prior to the destruction of some of the evidence by china clay working. The investigations began in 1976 with a survey of the field monuments and the initiation of soil, vegetation, small mammal and phosphate studies in addition to the search for peat deposits of sufficient antiquity. From 1977 the programme was determined by the encroachment of the quarries a… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…It appears that soil degeneration, corroborated by pollen data, from acid brown earths to podzols and gleysols had already started during the Bronze Age occupation. Degradation continued so that by 2600 years BP (650 BC) both soils and vegetation were similar and indistinguishable from those of today (Balaam et al, 1982).…”
Section: Discussion: Time Transgressive (Dis)continuous Habitation Pamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It appears that soil degeneration, corroborated by pollen data, from acid brown earths to podzols and gleysols had already started during the Bronze Age occupation. Degradation continued so that by 2600 years BP (650 BC) both soils and vegetation were similar and indistinguishable from those of today (Balaam et al, 1982).…”
Section: Discussion: Time Transgressive (Dis)continuous Habitation Pamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Pioneering work on the vegetation history of Dartmoor was undertaken by Simmons (1964), but the current models of the context and environment within which enclosure took place are based on research undertaken as part of the Shaugh Moor project, which integrated on-and off-site palaeoenvironment work with excavation (Smith et al, 1981;Balaam et al, 1982). The lower (<400 m) zones, subsequently dominated by enclosure, were predominantly open early in the second millennium BC but retained sufficient local woodland stands to provide timber for wooden structures, as evidenced from excavation.…”
Section: Current Understandings Of the Landscape Context Of The Dartmmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The soils around the upland fringe generally did not show evidence of peat formation or impoverishment and Dartmoor appeared to be a landscape not under significant landscape pressure (Caseldine and Hatton, 1994). The majority of published pollen diagrams show that vegetation remained predominantly open after the later Bronze Age, generally taken to imply seasonal use of the upland for summer grazing as part of a transhumance system through later prehistoric periods (Simmons, 1964;Smith et al, 1981;Balaam et al, 1982).…”
Section: Current Understandings Of the Landscape Context Of The Dartmmentioning
confidence: 99%
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