Rights Holder: Birmingham Museums Trust
CC License:
Our images can be used under a CC BY attribution licence (unless stated otherwise).
Unique ID: HESH-B11934
Object type certainty: Certain
Workflow
status: Awaiting validation
PAS-RC07
Grid F3
Five sherds from Severn Valley coarseware pottery vessels. As the fabric, colour and thickness differs in each sherd it is likely that different vessels are represented in the assemblage. Not enough survives of the sherds to indicate the form or overall vessel size. The sherds date from the Roman period (50 - 410).
All the sherds are irregular in plan and broadly sub-rectangular in profile. The sherds are also worn and abraded by movement in the ploughsoil. The fabric is a relatively soft fired earthenware with a number of small angular and sub-angular black grit (possibly coal measure rock / coal) and sparse quartz inclusions. The fabric is also mica rich. The colour of the fabric varies but is broadly a uniform mid orange to orange-brown colour. These sherds vary in thickness and most probably represent cooking and storage vessels.
The largest sherd measures 24.3mm in length, 20.3 mm in width, 5.9 mm in thickness and weighs 3.6 grams.
The smallest sherd measures 17 mm in length, 13 mm in width, 4.8 mm in thickness and weighs 0.9 grams.
The bulk weight is 9 grams.
Subsequent action after recording: Returned to finder
Broad period: ROMAN
Period from: ROMAN
Date from: Circa AD 50
Date to: Circa AD 410
Quantity: 5
Weight: 9 g
Date(s) of discovery: Monday 1st October 2007 - Friday 30th November 2007
This information is restricted for your access level.
Other reference: PAS-RC07 Grid F3
Primary material: Ceramic
Manufacture method: Wheel made
Completeness: Fragment
Grid reference source: GPS (From FLO)
Unmasked grid reference accurate to a 1 metre square.
No references cited so far.