Herald Express (Torbay, Brixham & South Hams Edition)

Age-old rubbish unveils clues for archaeolog­ists

- BY COLLEEN SMITH

The archaeolog­ical dig in fields near Ipplepen

HOUSEHOLD rubbish thrown away by families thousands of years ago will provide valuable clues for archaeolog­ists uncovering the secrets of Devon’s Iron Age, Roman, and Medieval history.

The rubbish, found by experts working on a major archaeolog­ical dig in the county, will allow them to reconstruc­t farming methods thousands of years ago and learn more about what people ate.

Members of the community and experts from the University of Exeter are once again investigat­ing fields near Ipplepen, in south Devon.

The excavation­s have shown features such as ditches and wells were back filled with domestic rubbish including broken pots, butchered animal bones, metal studs from old shoes, and even a dead badger.

The remains of Amphora, large pottery storage vessels used to transport and store wine and olive oil from the Mediterran­ean, have also been found. This suggests the community in the area enjoyed foreign food and drink.

The settlement was occupied from the Middle and Late Iron Age – from about 400 BC to AD43 – throughout the Roman period and into the early medieval period.

It was home to a farming community and, in the Roman period, a road was constructe­d through the settlement that linked it with Exeter.

Professor Stephen Rippon, who is leading the archaeolog­ical work, said: “We can use these animal bones to reconstruc­t past patterns of farming.

“If animals such as the sheep were killed at a young age then they were being kept for their meat – lamb. Whereas if they were kept into old age then they were being kept for their wool and even their milk.

“Some of the bones that have been found have cut marks from when they were butchered.”

University of Exeter archaeolog­ists have been excavating different parts of the site during the past seven years with the help of the local community.

In previous years, excavation­s have uncovered Iron Age roundhouse­s, a Romano-British settlement and associated field system, Roman road, and an early medieval cemetery.

This year the team are exploring the southern part of the site with a settlement occupied during Britain’s final years being part of the Roman Empire.

 ??  ?? Picture: JIM WILEMAN/University of Exeter
Picture: JIM WILEMAN/University of Exeter

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