23rd February 2006, 01:22 AM
I agree that the area around the henges should be scheduled but, and I know this has been said time and time again, unless the farmer stops ploughing then the archaeology is going to be destroyed. There is no question about it. The features, of which there are not many!, have been so heavily truncated by the plough already. I say excavate and preserve by the written record.
How many people have been to visit the henges? I have been to see the middle henge and my overall impression was great. However, there are a few points to keep in mind, icluding the lovely view of a large, stinky landfill, the fact that it is being quarried from the inside out by pesky bunnies, or badgers or whatever they were and large chunks of earth were just falling away. Oh, and you can't forget the rusty iron farm implements rotting away on the side of the earthwork! Hardly what a tourist would want to pay money to see.
What about the farmer? If the land was scheduled and couldn't be ploughed anymore, how is the farmer meant to make a living?
Where does Dr. Harding get his figures from? How do you get
"300+" from the small number of features that were actually recorded. I wish archaeology was that predictable!
I'm sorry I went on a bit of a tangent there.
dinos
How many people have been to visit the henges? I have been to see the middle henge and my overall impression was great. However, there are a few points to keep in mind, icluding the lovely view of a large, stinky landfill, the fact that it is being quarried from the inside out by pesky bunnies, or badgers or whatever they were and large chunks of earth were just falling away. Oh, and you can't forget the rusty iron farm implements rotting away on the side of the earthwork! Hardly what a tourist would want to pay money to see.
What about the farmer? If the land was scheduled and couldn't be ploughed anymore, how is the farmer meant to make a living?
Quote:quote:I still think that the archaeology on Ladybridge should be scheduled, if Dr Harding is correct then this settlement is the largest so far discovered in Britain (300+ Neolithic occupation pits), surely good reason for Scheduling? I know this will not stop ploughing, but it would mean more controls than at present.
Where does Dr. Harding get his figures from? How do you get
"300+" from the small number of features that were actually recorded. I wish archaeology was that predictable!
I'm sorry I went on a bit of a tangent there.
dinos