• A rather vague report on a dig at Wittenham Clumps in Oxfordshire--most such reports tend to focus on one or several attractive finds, but there doesn't seem to have been one of those here yet. It's still interesting how, despite a very limited site, a bit of Roman villa and a larger, much earlier settlement have been found. I suspect that they may not have much money to do further work, and perhaps are hoping to attract donations. A site like this is undoubtedly much richer than such a limited excavation can reveal. I'm always fascinated by how settlement patterns change over time, and how previously very powerful sites decline into total insignificance, to end up under a layer of soil that at first glance betrays no aspect of what used to be there. In the case of the Roman villa, the main reason why it is now under soil is because people came and removed building stone for use elsewhere, and perhaps people also took parts of the roundhouses with them for re-use elsewhere, but it's quite possible that those simply decayed over time until they were levelled.

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/feb/14/astonishing-dig-reveals-domestic-life-in-the-iron-age

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