Harrogate hoard featured in Archaeology magazine

October 29th, 2007 by daniel pett

The exciting Viking hoard that was announced earlier this year, has just been featured in the AIA’s magazine.

In a muddy field near the town of Harrogate in northern England, father-and-son metal detectorists David and Andrew Whelan made a remarkable discovery: the largest and most spectacular Viking treasure hoard found in Britain for 150 years. It is made up of 617 silver coins from as far away as Afghanistan, Russia, and Scandinavia, as well as 65 other objects, including arm bands (one gold), ingots (metal bars), and pieces of chopped-up (“hack”) silver–all contained in an exquisite silver vessel. “At first dad presumed [the vessel] was an old ball cock [the round plastic float that controls the flow of water in a toilet] because he didn’t have his glasses on,” says Andrew Whelan, a 35-year-old surveyor from Leeds. But they realized they were onto something special when they saw a penny with an image of the Anglo-Saxon king, Edward the Elder. “Within two minutes it had gone from being an average day to something beyond our wildest dreams. We were stunned and started to shake slightly,” he recalls.

To read the rest, visit their website, or better still subscribe and support their work. There’s a couple of errors in the text of Kate’s article. Most notably, we don’t pay a cash incentive to encourage recording. Items that are possibly Treasure could result in a reward shared between the finder and the landowner.

Terracotta army half-term events

October 24th, 2007 by daniel pett

The Children's Terracotta ArmyThe British Museum is running a series of events for half-term based around the blockbusting First Emperor exhibition. Our two Young Graduates for Museums and Galleries interns, Helen Etheridge and Dominic Coyne, have come back to help out and are presently engaged in:

  1. leading people to story telling,
  2. helping children build an Imperial City
  3. build their own clay warriors (see the flickr photo stream of Mark Frith for examples.)

These workshops were lead by Mark Frith and Sue Pritchard and were constantly packed whenever we went across to the Great Court.

The Museum’s website describes the events as:

Explore the life and afterlife of China’s First Emperor. Help build an imperial city and join the workforce making a miniature terracotta army.

These and other exciting activities are free and run as drop-in sessions in the Great Court, the Clore Education Centre and the Chinese galleries. Full details of the daily activity programme will be available from the Paul Hamlyn Library each morning.

If you are planning to come and visit the exhibition, as well as join in with these activities, it is imperative to book tickets in advance. Unless you get to the Museum early, you are unlikely to get a ticket….it is worth it!

300,000 artefacts recorded on the database

October 22nd, 2007 by daniel pett

Today is quite momentous for the Portable Antiquities Scheme. Charlotte Burrill, Finds Liaison Officer for Berkshire & Oxfordshire recorded the 300,000th object onto the Scheme’s database. I’m not sure why she recorded this today, as she is actually on leave, shows how dedicated they all are! There are other records in a paper format, so if you’re adding up records or objects from the Annual Reports, this explains the discrepancy.

Charlotte recorded a grotty Roman coin (a nummus or radiate), which can be found shortly (when she’s promoted it at BERK-CD8351. However in the meantime, here’s an image of this not so pretty find. This coin was found at a Weekend Wanderer’s rally recently.

Well done to all the finders and the Scheme’s staff and volunteers who have added to this corpus of data.

300,000 record

Shortly, I will be releasing a discussion document for the future of the Scheme’s database, so that people can use the resources we have more easily. I hope that we get some good feedback for the planned changes.

Celtic Coin Index data now on Online Archaeology map

October 18th, 2007 by daniel pett

Checking through comments on the CCI blog, I found this one by Steve White who runs the Online Archaeology website:

Dan -

I only just caught this blog. You’ve done a great job getting this API out, and I hope it will encourage others.

I’ve added it to my map, here’s the instructions:

- Go to http://www.online-archaeology.co.uk/GoogleMap/
- Click Browse
- Expand the tree to say Roman > Coloniae, then click on ‘Coloniae’ in the tree view
- Click any marker to show the InfoWindow
- Click the black icon at the top of the InfoWindow

This will load all coins in the same county as the clicked item.

Steve posted this whilst I was on leave, so I have only just got round to looking at what he has done. Follow his instructions above and give it a whirl. He’s one of the first to play around with the API that I built for the CCI. I hope to do something similar with the Scheme’s main database upon rebuild. We have a mass of information that I’d like to let people use without restriction. Well done Steve.

British Museum website domain change

October 17th, 2007 by daniel pett

Just a heads up for some readers. The British Museum website has changed to better represent the Museum as a museum of the world, with the use of .org being more familiar to a global audience. Coupled with the shorter address (dropping the redundant ‘the’) the new address would be easier to promote, and recall.

Therefore if you’ve got websites that link to the BM, our new address is www.britishmuseum.org and our email addresses will change to name@britishmuseum.org
An SMTP alias will ensure that old email addresses work such as those referred to by british-museum.ac.uk and thebritishmuseum.ac.uk. And if you haven’t checked out the Terracotta warriors exhibition, get down to the Museum and see it.

Pleiades project at UNC

October 17th, 2007 by daniel pett

Sorry for the paucity of writing recently, I’ve had some time out to get married and have a honeymoon diving in the Maldives. There’s been quite a lot going on recently and I’m still catching up slowly.

Pleiades imageI’m not sure how many people are fully aware of the fantastic work that is going on at the University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill) with regards to turning the Barrington Atlas of the Classical World into a digital goldmine based upon the Plone open-source CMS.

Organized by the Ancient World Mapping Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, U.S.A., Pleiades brings together a global community of scholars, students and enthusiasts to expand and enhance continually the information originally brought together by the Classical Atlas Project (1988-2000) to support the publication of the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World (R.J.A. Talbert, ed., Princeton, 2000).

Our name, “Pleiades” (the daughters of Atlas in Greek Mythology) reflects both this heritage and the forward-looking goal of collaborative diversification.

I had the pleasure of collaborating with Tom Elliot and others on the Digital Coins project last year, and I’m currently a technical observer of their project. They have introduced a huge array of features, some of which have inspired me to add features to a couple of my projects (Sean Gillies’ post on geoRSS for instance).

The Pleiades project has just released a large amount of their information into public circulation with permalinks for use within software that support simple geoRSS specs. They offer several of their grid squares, and the current release of all places in the Barrington Atlas under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Awesome! Keep it up chaps.

Barrington Atlas in Google Earth
All places viewed via Google Earth

View Larger Map
All places viewed via Google Maps interface

Sean is really active at pushing geographic developments and loves his Python. If you want to get involved, he has a Google group on RESTful geographic technology and chucks some thought provoking ideas around at his blog (Tom has just started his own blog as well). I’m monitoring what they are up to as I’m just about to begin specifying the next stage of development for the Scheme’s database. The Scheme’s database is about to hit 200,000 records and 300,000 objects recorded, but it has inherent flaws and functional problems that were left unresolved by Oxford ArchDigital before they liquidated and were bought out by Clarinet. We’re taking the development work entirely in house now and I am proposing to create a bespoke software solution on either a RAILs or PHP codebase, with a RESTful API, with the www.findsdatabase.org.uk URL becoming obsolete (page rank and linking at the moment is not an issue!) and the new dataset residing at www.finds.org.uk/database with friendly permalinked URLs. I want to combine the Treasure Act system (currently in a closed .NET application within the British Museum), the Celtic Coin Index data, possibly Peter Guest’s Roman coin project (subject to agreement) and the Scheme’s data into one database and then have the facility for geographic extensions to the system and the ability for external developers to reuse our data and produce fantastic mashups. Several of the brilliant things that the Pleiades project offer I want to emulate with the http://www.unc.edu/awmc/pleiades/bibliography/Zotero extension ready. The Scheme has over 10,000 references that could be cited by academics easily.)

Hopefully over time, institutions around the world will start to catch on and see the Pleiades project and others that get on the wagon as innovators. We shall see. Read Tom’s latest post on his blog and see whether you think he’s heading the right way!

Under the Plough: archaeology of the topsoil

October 15th, 2007 by daniel pett

I’ve been asked to publicise the conference outlined below, so here we go!

CBA South East Annual Conference 2007 (in association with the Department of Classical and Archaeological Studies, the University of Kent)

Saturday 10 November 2007
Tickets:
CBA SE Members £15.00
Non-Members £17.50

Cheques should be made payable to:
CBA South East
University of Kent at Medway
Chatham Maritime
Chatham
Kent
ME4 4AG

Tickets Available From:

Steve & Eva Corbett
4 Ditchling Close
Eastbourne
East Sussex
BN23 8LS

PROGRAMME

09.30 Registration

Refreshments available in the Pilkington Suite

10.00 Introduction
John Mills, Chairman, CBA SE

10.05 The South East Research Framework: Project Update
Jake Weekes, Heritage Conservation Group Kent CC

10.20 Interpreting Lithic Scatters
Chris Butler (tbc), Mid-Sussex Field Archaeology Team

11.00 Coffee/Tea
Pilkington Suite

11.20 Field survey on the Lincolnshire Wolds: characterizing Roman settlement in a downland setting
Steve Willis, University of Kent

12.00 Fieldwalking: Theory, Method and Practice
Jeremy Taylor (tbc), University of Leicester

12.40 Questions

12.45 Lunch

Coffee/Tea – Pilkington Suite

1.25 CBA SE AGM All welcome to attend

1.50 The Portable Antiquities Scheme: More Than Just Small Finds
Liz Andrews-Wilson, Finds Liaison Officer, Sussex

2.20 Digging Hoards and Scatters: Some Case Studies
David Williams, Finds Liaison Officer, Surrey

2.40 Hands Across The Divide: Detectorists and Archaeologists working together
Derek Page, Brighton and Hove Metal Detecting Club

3.00 Coffee/Tea
Pilkington Suite

3.15 Interpreting Anglo-Saxon Metalwork Scatters
Laura McLean

3.55 The Archaeology of Ploughsoil: Theoretical Overview
Christopher Evans, Cambridge University

4.35 Questions

5.00 Close

The content contained within the Blog's pages do not represent an official position from any of the organisations associated with the Portable Antiquities Scheme. They are solely those of the post's author.