The valley floodplain landscape covered by the Gill Mill quarry, almost 130ha, was intensively exploited from about 300 BC at a variety of Iron Age settlements.
A review of the rich and diverse evidence for understanding past climate and environmental change in the Thames Valley, and the effects on plant and animal populations and the challenges and opportunities these presented to early humans.
Excavations in advance of gravel quarrying in the Upper Thames Valley at... Læs mere
This volume synthesises excavations from the Cotswold Water Park, centred... Læs mere
For over 500 years, from the middle Iron Age to the early Roman period, the 1st gravel terrace of the river Thames at Thornhill Farm appears to have been lived in and worked as a cattle ranch.
The site at Whitecross Farm, including timber structures located on the... Læs mere
Excavations conducted between 1981 and 1986 in advance of gravel extraction in Gravelly Guy field, Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire, revealed archaeological... Læs mere
This volume reports Neolithic–Bronze Age discoveries at Yarnton–Cassington, including early houses, cremations, pits, monuments and evolving... Læs mere
In common with other volumes in the Thames Through Time series, this account of the Thames Valley in the millennium and a half before the Roman conquest seeks to examine change in human society from a thematic point of view.
Excavations at Spring Road Municipal Cemetery, Abingdon, Oxfordshire have revealed... Læs mere
The gravel terraces of the river Thames have revealed a wealth of archaeological information about the evolution of the landscape of the region, the development of the settlement pattern, and past human occupation.
This volume reports a 3rd–4th-century Romano-British cemetery of 69 burials and an... Læs mere