The recovery of a small lithic assemblage from excavations during improvements to the A1237/B1224, Wetherby Road roundabout, York, demonstrate that the area was being exploited, at least in a limited way, as early as the Neolithic. The earliest feature was defined as such by its stratigraphic relationship with a pit radiocarbon dated to the Bronze Age, and from which a rubber-stone for a saddle quern was recovered. Activity at the site had intensified by the Late Iron Age, at which time a pastoral landscape had become established with open ground or grassland subdivided by ditched enclosures and hedgerows. It has been possible to detail local conditions from a suite of environmental evidence captured in a series of large waterlogged pits, interpreted as watering holes for livestock. The continued exploitation of a spring accessed by these features is evident from maintenance of the watering holes during the transition to the Romano-British period. However, by the mid-Roman period the watering holes had silted up and fallen out of use.
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Savine et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b3aaa802a1e69014ccb64a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.11141/ia.71.9
Benjamin Savine
Department of Archaeology
Thomas Coates
Department of Archaeology
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Internet Archaeology
Department of Archaeology
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