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Record ID: NLM-C4F4B2
Object type: DAUB
Broad period: UNKNOWN
County: North Lincolnshire
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation
Daub. A fragment of daub which has been heated, now reddened and oxidised throughout. Such material may come from a structure with wattle and daub walling which has burnt down, or from the daub fabric of a kiln or oven, small structures made with clay which were typically for domestic use. Suggested date: Unknown, Roman to Medieval, 43-1500
Length: 47.4mm, Width: 43.5mm, Thickness: 23.8mm, Weight: 27.58gms
Created on: Thursday 23rd March 2023
Last updated: Thursday 23rd March 2023
Spatial data recorded.
This findspot is known as 'Messingham', grid reference and parish protected.
Record ID: NLM-C174A0
Object type: DAUB
Broad period: UNKNOWN
County: North Lincolnshire
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation
Ceramic building material: burnt daub. Two fragments of fired clay, reduced, with imprints of round sticks of diameter 30mm to 12mm. The larger fragment has a finger-smoothed surface at right angles to the orientation of a stake passing through the clay. These fragments are presumed to derive from the wattle and daub wall of a structure. They were kindly identified by Wallace Collyer of the North Lincolnshire Pottery Research Group. Suggested date: unknown, Roman to Medieval, 43-1500
Weight: 175.27gms
Created on: Wednesday 30th June 2021
Last updated: Wednesday 30th June 2021
Spatial data recorded.
This findspot is known as 'Holme pipeline', grid reference and parish protected.
Record ID: CORN-C86258
Object type: DAUB
Broad period: ROMAN
County: Cornwall
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation
Two daub fragments of light orange to brown fabric, with grass impressions and quartzite fragments which may have been picked up when the material was being made to attach to the wattle as insulation in order to make the walls for the round house.
Romano-British, judging from the majority of material that it was found with, but as no excavation has taken place, no structures have been found.
The measurements below are for the larger fragment pictured.
Quinnell (2004) mentions daub fragments from Trethurgy on page 128, No.5.8, but does not illustrate them.
Created on: Monday 23rd April 2007
Last updated: Thursday 24th February 2011
Spatial data recorded.
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