Yorkshire Post

Scorched land gives up its secrets

Heatwave has been a headache for farmers but archeologi­sts have field day as rare marks are unearthed

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE SCORCHED summer earth that has threatened farms and fuelled the spread of wildfires across the region has also laid bare some of the land’s oldest secrets, it emerges today.

Archeologi­sts, surveying the patchwork of arid fields from above, have discovered new traces of England’s buried history, including neolithic ceremonial monuments, Iron Age settlement­s and a Roman farm. The evidence has been seen for the first time in cropmarks – patterns left in crops and grass.

Among the most remarkable discovery is of Iron Age square barrows at Pocklingto­n in the Yorkshire Wolds, where marks of four squares indicate the distinctiv­e remains of a burial site, experts at Historic England said.

Although rare nationally, such barrows are common in the Wolds and are sometimes associated with elaborate burial rituals.

Last year, Pocklingto­n was the site of the discovery of a chariot and horse buried together – a find described as one of the most significan­t of the last half century. The new discoverie­s also include two Neolithic “cursus” monuments near Clifton Reynes, Milton Keynes, and a Roman farm at Bicton in Devon, where cropmarks in a field of grass cut for silage have been revealed. Duncan Wilson, chief executive of Historic England, said the dry weather had enabled scientists to “see beneath the soil”. He said: “Cropmarks are much better defined when the soil has less moisture.

“The exceptiona­l weather has opened up whole areas at once rather than just one or two fields, and it has been fascinatin­g to see so many traces of our past graphicall­y revealed.”

More details of the lost Elizabetha­n buildings and gardens associated with Tixall Hall in Staffordsh­ire can also be seen through the drought, revealing the buried foundation­s of the original 1555 building and a new hall started during the First World War, but demolished in 1926.

And at Eynsham in Oxfordshir­e, a circle of pits not visible for years, reveal the buried remains of funeral monuments that could date back to 4000BC. Historic England uses aerial photograph­y of cropmarks to produce archaeolog­ical maps which help to assess the significan­ce of buried remains and can be used to make decisions about protecting them from developmen­t or damage caused by ploughing.

Helen Winton, the organisati­on’s aerial investigat­ion and mapping manager, said it was “very exciting” to have had the hot weather for so long.

The last “exceptiona­l year” was 2011, when more than 1,500 sites were discovered, she said.

The experts said that even in an area as well explored as the Yorkshire Wolds, extreme weather could still throw up new discoverie­s.

Damian Grady, the agency’s aerial reconnaiss­ance manager, said: “This has been one of my busiest summers in 20 years of flying and it is has been very rewarding making discoverie­s in areas that do not normally reveal cropmarks.”

 ?? PICTURES: HISTORIC ENGLAND/JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. ?? BROWNED OFF: Clockwise, from top left, Tixall Hall a Grade I listed gatehouse in Staffordsh­ire built in 1557 during the reign of Elizabeth I; Iron Age ‘squate barrows’ near Pocklingto­n; Prehistori­c ceremonial landscape in Oxfordshir­e; Prehistori­c enclosure, Churchstan­ton, Somerset; Bronze Age burial mound and prehistori­c pit alignment, Scropton, Derbyshire; Two Neolithic cursus monuments near Clifton Reynes, Milton Keynes; inset below, Matt Oakey of Historic England.
PICTURES: HISTORIC ENGLAND/JONATHAN GAWTHORPE. BROWNED OFF: Clockwise, from top left, Tixall Hall a Grade I listed gatehouse in Staffordsh­ire built in 1557 during the reign of Elizabeth I; Iron Age ‘squate barrows’ near Pocklingto­n; Prehistori­c ceremonial landscape in Oxfordshir­e; Prehistori­c enclosure, Churchstan­ton, Somerset; Bronze Age burial mound and prehistori­c pit alignment, Scropton, Derbyshire; Two Neolithic cursus monuments near Clifton Reynes, Milton Keynes; inset below, Matt Oakey of Historic England.
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