The latest publication by Oxford Archaeology brings together the reports of two sites in the Upper Thames Valley in Gloucestershire. The sites, Horcott Quarry, Fairford, and Arkell’s Land, Kempsford, are in ...
A routine excavation by archaeologists from OA East at Chesterton in north Cambridge led to the discovery of the first significant remains of prehistoric settlement in the area and possible evidence ...
Following a visit to RAF Brampton in Cambridgeshire last year, when eight early Roman pottery kilns were uncovered, archaeologists from OA East returned to the area to find two previously unknown ...
Oxford Archaeology is facilitating a programme of educational sessions for primary schools, and a complementary exhibition and associated events on the topic of bioarchaeology. The project is a collaboration with the Wellcome ...
The iconic White Cliffs of Dover in Kent are seemingly timeless and unchanging symbols of Britain, but are in fact subject to geological processes that sooner or later will dramatically change ...
Oxford Archaeology is supporting a new Heritage Lottery Funded project to develop, promote and research Britain's lowest lying Iron Age hill fort, Stonea Camp, near March in Cambridgeshire.
A team from Oxford Archaeology completed the re-excavation of a 17th century stoneware kiln, with some of the excavators who originally dug the kiln in 1974 on hand to watch proceedings
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Staff from Oxford Archaeology are in Woolwich this week to excavate a post-medieval stoneware pottery kiln – 43 years after the kiln was first investigated