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Bags of leather offcuts from Sample 11

Sample 11 is finished. For most of you that will mean nothing. For others, namely co-workers who have suffered my moans, it may possibly mean something (albeit, with a healthy dollop of confusion and a smattering of nonchalance). For me however, this is happy news. You see, sample 11 took ages to process, all due to artefact retrieval.

The context was noted to contain leather, so a large sample was taken in order to retrieve this. 160 litres to be precise.

40 litres of this were processed in the normal way, with a light and heavy fraction being taken for assessment. The remaining 120 litres was then wet sieved for artefacts. This is a simple process really. Wash away the dirt and retrieve only the artefacts. Well, simple yes, but when you’re dealing with a large assemblage of tiny offcuts of leather then simple soon becomes time consuming. To be honest though, I loved this sample. Yes, it was a nightmare to go through the tank as it turned the water to thick black filth by merely a glance; yes, it was four times bigger than a normal sample and yes, it took forever to extract every piece of leather, but a nice sample like this is rare and really makes you appreciate just how great it is to be working on a site like Prescot Street. I mean, as well as the masses of leather and pottery (yawn), there were some really lovely finds such as a near intact shoe/boot, three nice wooden pegs and a small fragment of textile (approx. an inch square).

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Fragment of textile from sample 11

Why is all this great? Well, normally, organic products such as wood, leather and cloth wouldn’t survive being in the ground for such a period of time. However, this sample was waterlogged, which means that the context was saturated with water. In as simple terms as I can put this without going into chemistry; this prevents the air from entering the soil which preserves the perishable objects since oxygen is the primary contributor towards decay.

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Leather shoe/boot from Sample 11

So once out of the sample, the perishable finds must remain wet. Leaving them to dry out would cause all kinds of problems. The next step for these items is conservation, which I’m sure will be discussed in a blog in the not too distant future. So for those of you that love your chemistry look out for that.

All in all, this is a very exciting sample. Right, I’m off to flot (not a spelling mistake) to see what else is out there. The Ark of the Covenant would be nice. As would be a Crystal Skull to throw at George Lucas’s face in penance for ruining an iconic series. Bitter? No. We’re just archaeologists who are trained how to find bodies. Hiding them are easy…….you hear that George?

cemetery, 122 Photos

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Context (1930) The far North East end of site Zone 4, facing Prescot Street Zone 4 Far East end of site Remains of heavily truncated skeleton (1918) Anies defining the cut of tomb foundation (1839) Anies & Tomasz and tomb burial (1839) Across site looking north west North East corner of Zone 4 Pitland in Zone 4 Looking South West across Zone 4 South east end of site in Zone 4 Zone 4 South East (1901) Burial (1890) (1898) Roman quarry pit (1894) Roman quarry pit (1873) Roman quarry pit (1887) Roman quarry pit Roman coffin stain with skeleton (1891) Tomasz in grave cut (1910) Roman grave (1859) Grave cut [1910] - the deepest one on site so far (1863) Roman quarry pit (1909) Oval-shaped Roman quarry pit (1907) The basement of one of the houses on Prescot Street [1910] Grave cut Liz's current project - a skull Anies and some well-placed advertising Adrian, Ashley & Tomasz discuss the basement area in Zone 4 Fergal taking samples from soak-away (1555) Across Zone 4 looking south west Liz cleaning a skull North East corner of Zone 4 [1915] Roman pit Cist Cremation (1805) Double Cremation Opposite view of Double Cremation (1812) GeoPhoto Burial (1812) Rich Cremation (1801) Detail of Cremation (1801) Detail of Cremation 1801 Detail of offerings associated with 1801 Three flagons laid outide wooden container (1801) GeoPhoto Burial 1810 (legs only) Burial (1810) Early stages of (1801) Pit [1873] Cremations 1805 and 1820 with lids on Will and Jon tackle a double cremation Double Cremation Aerial View Aerial View of Zone 3 eastern end East End of the Site The Whole Site Zone 3 Working Shot Zone 3 Working Shot Chalk Burial 1834 GeoPhoto Stone Lined Tomb 1839 Stone Lined Tomb (1839) Digger Bliss (1801) after partial lifting of the grave goods (1801) after partial lifting of the grave goods Looking back over zone 2 Western end of Zone 3 looking north Remnants of the Ring Ditch [1770] Zone 3 border with Zone 4 Fergal and Ruth Double Cremation 1805/1820 looking south (1831) after excavation (1831) GeoPhoto (1831) GeoPhoto (1831) Upturned skull Burial (1831) Wide shallow pit [1829] (1824) GeoPhoto Burial (1824) Liz looking so happy to be lifting the feet of (1812) Detail of Burial (1812) Greg excavating burial 1812 Ruth lifting cremation (1801) Clearing a large pit Cut of Cremation Burial [1856] Cremation 1851 Grave Cut [1835] Cut [1801] of Cremation Burial Tile Cist 1805 After Opening (GeoPhoto) Grave Cut [1832] Shallow Pit [1844] Burial 1813 - Grave Cut Context 1574 - Roman pit Context 1566 - shallow linear cut Context 1561 - large posthole/small pit Context 1570 - Pit Anies, pretty in pink. Context 1581 - Gary's Roman pit Placed stones within a linear feature Working shot north east Roman building materials (?) from context 1455 David protects his hearing Gary and Ionut Adrian digging pit 1469 Looking north Adrian admires Anies' techniques Ruth and Will digging a drainage feature 1406 1406 again If you're not on the list, you're not coming in Will in 1478 - possibly a Roman robbed out wall foundation Liz in a ditch -  1471 & 1473 Fergal cleaning something or other Gary sorting out some levels Gary is working out his line of collimation Never underestimate the comedy value of an auto level Across site looking south west 1406 - drainage feature 1443 gravel surface 1443 gravel surface 1458