As well as the stand we ran some workshops. Students could learn about flint knapping in ‘Crash and bang: Sounds, forces and stone tool making’ during which they used boiled sweets and wooden mallets to think about how waves travel through different materials and cause fractures. Or they could visit ‘Potted Prehistory’ and learn about how the arrival of pottery changed our eating habits – whilst making their very own carinated bowl, inspired by prehistoric pottery.
Students having a go at the 'What's for Breakfast' activity.
In June, we crossed over to the east of the country, returning to the Humber STEM primary school event at Craven Park. Alongside Balfour Beatty, we were able to explore how archaeology fits in with construction and share findings from the archaeological investigations at Trinity Burial Ground on Castle Street, where we carefully and respectfully excavated and reburied the funerary remains.
Students putting together the pottery pieces they excavated from the dig boxes.