SDO18820 - A Landscape Revealed. 10,000 Years on a Chalkland Farm

Please read our .

Type Monograph
Title A Landscape Revealed. 10,000 Years on a Chalkland Farm
Author/Originator
Date/Year 2000

Abstract/Summary

External Links (0)

Description

Publisher's Synopsis: The Down Farm Landscape (where the author's family has farmed for generations) is one of the most carefully studied areas in Western Europe. Much of this work has been carried out by the author himself - who in 1992 won the Pitt Rivers award for independent archaeology. His work has involved five universities and one of the major field units were recently featured in a BBC 2 'Meet the Ancestors' programme. The farm is part of Cranborne Chase, just south of Salisbury (where, coincidentally, the famous General Pitt Rivers began his pioneering work in the 1880s). It not only contains the Neolithic Dorset Cursus, numerous long barrows and Hambledon Hill, but over the last 30 years henges, shafts, plastered houses, land divisions, enclosures and cemeteries have been identified and excavated. The farm has its own museum and for the book the author provided a unique range of illustrations (including full colour reconstructions).

Location

Referenced Monuments (3)

  • Enclosure north east of Ryall's Farm, Gussage St Michael (Monument)
  • Ring ditch and associated timber circle and avenue, Ogden Down, Gussage St Michael (Monument)
  • Ring ditch on Ogden Down, Gussage St Michael (Monument)

Referenced Events (0)

Record last edited

Mar 29 2023 8:21PM