8th August 2008, 08:54 PM
Hello all. T'other half is too lazy to create a new profile, so I am posting this question on his behalf. Can anyone offer their opinion? Ta muchly! :
"I have been excavating a Romano- British feature these past few days. It is sub-circular, roughly 8 metres across, 1.2 metres deep, fairly steep sides which drop to vertical followed by a flat base.
The initial few fills are slumps of natural sand and gravel with little silt. Then the whole lot is covered by a layer of sand and gravel which has been cemented by what appears to be iron, so that the fill is very solid and compact. The fill also contains lumps of iron stone.
The fills above this change to dark silty clays containing domestic animal bones.
The gravel fills have very little in the way of finds.
What sort of a depositional environment would result in the gravel becoming cemented with iron? Is this a sign of waterlogging but free from vegetational and organic decay?
My current best guess is that the feature was kept full of water and was kept clean and free from decaying plant matter which is why there is little silt and few finds, and that the silts and clays represent the abandonment of the feature and it becoming gradually filled by vegetation and rubbish."
"I have been excavating a Romano- British feature these past few days. It is sub-circular, roughly 8 metres across, 1.2 metres deep, fairly steep sides which drop to vertical followed by a flat base.
The initial few fills are slumps of natural sand and gravel with little silt. Then the whole lot is covered by a layer of sand and gravel which has been cemented by what appears to be iron, so that the fill is very solid and compact. The fill also contains lumps of iron stone.
The fills above this change to dark silty clays containing domestic animal bones.
The gravel fills have very little in the way of finds.
What sort of a depositional environment would result in the gravel becoming cemented with iron? Is this a sign of waterlogging but free from vegetational and organic decay?
My current best guess is that the feature was kept full of water and was kept clean and free from decaying plant matter which is why there is little silt and few finds, and that the silts and clays represent the abandonment of the feature and it becoming gradually filled by vegetation and rubbish."