24th September 2009, 03:58 PM
The Stansted Airport excavations by Framework Archaeology
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/resource...ework_2009
The ADS and Framework Archaeology are pleased to announce the online release of the Stansted Airport excavation archives. Framework Archaeology is a Joint Venture agreement between Oxford Archaeology and Wessex Archaeology to provide archaeological services to BAA. Between 1999 and 2004 they undertook a series of large-scale archaeological excavations at Stansted Airport, Essex. Covering the Neolithic to the Post-Medieval, the results of these archaeological excavations were published by Framework Archaeology in 2008 in the book entitled "From hunter gatherers to huntsmen:
A history of the Stansted landscape". This online digital archive contains many thousands of files such as text, images and databases, constituting the digital archive for the project. In addition to these downloads, this special collection also has an interactive map interface to allow users to explore the data directly over the web.
This new resource will be of interest to archaeological researchers of all periods and those with an interest in new methodological approaches representing as it does the output from one of the largest archaeological projects of recent years.
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/resource...ework_2009
The ADS and Framework Archaeology are pleased to announce the online release of the Stansted Airport excavation archives. Framework Archaeology is a Joint Venture agreement between Oxford Archaeology and Wessex Archaeology to provide archaeological services to BAA. Between 1999 and 2004 they undertook a series of large-scale archaeological excavations at Stansted Airport, Essex. Covering the Neolithic to the Post-Medieval, the results of these archaeological excavations were published by Framework Archaeology in 2008 in the book entitled "From hunter gatherers to huntsmen:
A history of the Stansted landscape". This online digital archive contains many thousands of files such as text, images and databases, constituting the digital archive for the project. In addition to these downloads, this special collection also has an interactive map interface to allow users to explore the data directly over the web.
This new resource will be of interest to archaeological researchers of all periods and those with an interest in new methodological approaches representing as it does the output from one of the largest archaeological projects of recent years.
For really I think that the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live, as the greatest he
Thomas Rainborough 1647
Thomas Rainborough 1647