Trench 5
Share
Thursday, 12 August 2010
DAY 8 - 11th August 2010
Trench 5
Wednesday, 11 August 2010
DAY 7 - 10th August 2010
Trench 6

Monday, 9 August 2010
Day 6 - 8th August 2010
Trench 5
Saturday, 7 August 2010
Day 5 - 7th August 2010
Trench 5
So far, so good!
Trench 6
DAY 4 - 6th August 2010
Trench 5
Friday, 6 August 2010
DAY 3 - August 5th 2010
Trench 5
Wednesday, 4 August 2010
Day 2 - August 4th 2010
Trench 8
2010 Season DAY 1: 3rd August 2010
Trench 5 - enclosure of unknown date....
Hey, this is Chelsea from Glasgow University. I was working on Trench 5a. Today we were cleaning up the site using hoes and shovels. This was to make the features of the site become clearer. After using the hoes we had to go over what we had done using our trowels. We were able to see the outer henge ditches really well after all the cleaning. This was a lot of hard work but I guess it has to be done!
Trench 6 - henge, but perhaps not a henge


Trench 7 - palisaded enclosure postholes
Trench 8 - squarish barrows
xDay one on trench eight and morale was high as we proceeded to scrape back the first layers of topsoil to define the existing features with greater clarity and to realise new ones. The identification of adjacent twin Pictish Square Barrows, and possible supplementary burials within the Forteviot cropmark complex provides further possibilities to explore the complex relationships between earlier prehistoric activity and later activities, and to advance our understanding of Pictish burial practices.
Monday, 2 August 2010
SERF Begins!
Well, its a rainy morning in Glasgow and the staff and students of University of Glasgow are assembling for another fieldwork season up in Forteviot.
Finds are being packed up, luggage stowed and then we are off up the road to Strathallan School; who are kindly putting us up again for the month.
There we will meet up with the University of Aberdeen contingent and assorted others for lunch, a preliminary introduction to the project, then off to site to get some afternoon cleaning on the go! Hi Hoe!
Staff have been up in the area doing some geophysical survey, opening the trenches and getting some preliminary cleaning done all ready to get started. Hopefully the constant dreich weather in Glasgow won't follow us north and keep us off site today.
Hopefully our followers; old and new will enjoy the coming weeks of updates, info and pictures we will post on our blog - tell your friends.
Cheers for now,
Cathy
Sunday, 23 August 2009
Saturday 22, and another great day at the cemetery site at least for me personally.
I started on my feature four days ago and have trowelled down to a depth of about a metre on my Pictish burial. The contexts have varied from soft earth to shingle to gravel and back to earth until 2 days ago. Spotting a small deposit of charcoal, I followed it westwards to reveal a thin linear shape around 8 inches long and an inch wide, thinking it was a burned stick of some sort, I called Ewan to have a look. He recommended that I trowel the opposite east side to see if there was an opposite linear feature which there appeared to be also. To cut a long tale short the last two days have revealed a coffin shape of charred wood remarkably preserved in the acid soil which to me resembles a small burnt out boat. As the feature deepened and my arms shortened, a plank was needed to lay across the cut so that I could work in a more comfortable position which really helped, a good tip for the future would be to place a good flat stone under each end to stop the edges of the cut breaking and falling in like it did with me yesterday. Yesterday, I came across tooth enamel at the west end of the cut which I first mistook for small pieces of straw stalk which I thought had blown in to the feature but on closer examination appeared to be teeth. I laid the first piece on my trowel and found that it had only one side and was fragile and shell like. Around 7 or 8 were discovered and bagged carefully and for a while Archaeology was more like delicate dentistry. Today revealed more of the charred wood remains of what seems to be a coffin but the jury is still out with Ewan suggesting a log burial and a monastic burial as possible candidates of interpretation. In the last 15 mins of the day as I cleared the base of the burial to the pea gravel, I spotted more wood remains at the west end and a greyish-white sticky soil above where I found the enamel and so tonight the area is protected most skilfully with plastic bags, stones and a wheelbarrow on top, and awaits our return on the last morning of field school; and I have not even started my plan yet!