Scots Dyke to Turnpike by Howard-Davis, Christine (9781907686061) | Browns Books
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Scots Dyke to Turnpike

Part of the Lancaster Imprints series
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The A66 has been a routeway of significance for at least 2000 years, linking the east and west of the country by the Stainmore Pass.

Archaeological excavation ahead of the upgrading of the A66 to dual carriageway, between Greta Bridge and Scotch Corner, provided an important opportunity to investigate the development of the landscape.

The archaeological remains discovered range in date from early prehistory to the nineteenth century, and particularly from the Iron Age and early Roman period (c 800 BC - AD 100). One of the most significant results was the important new dating evidence for a section of the Scots Dyke, a substantial linear earthwork between the Rivers Tees and Swale.

It has been dated to the early-middle Iron Age, which places it within the wider Iron Age and Roman landscape revealed by the road improvement scheme.

This may indicate that it was related in some way to the Iron Age tribal centre at nearby Stanwick. The volume arises from a multi-disciplinary approach to the archaeology, with the emphasis placed on interpreting the sites within their wider landscape context.

It involved a multiplicity of authors, ranging from staff at Oxford Archaeology North, to external specialists, including staff at Lancaster University and University College, London.

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Product Details
Oxford Archaeology North
1907686061 / 9781907686061
Hardback
936.2
27/01/2015
United Kingdom
English
xii, 231 pages : illustrations (colour), maps (black and white, and colour)
30 cm

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