Anglo-Saxon settlement found at wind farm site

Blackleaf

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Archaeologists have unearthed an Anglo-Saxon settlement as part of preparation work for a £2.5bn wind farm.

East Anglia One is being built 30 miles off the Suffolk coast, with the onshore cable route running 23 miles from Bawdsey to Bramford.

There are 50 excavation sites along the route, with some 400 archaeologists working on the project.

Anglo-Saxon settlement found at wind farm cable site


9 October 2017
BBC News


The settlement is thought to have been used for seasonal work

Archaeologists have unearthed an Anglo-Saxon settlement as part of preparation work for a £2.5bn wind farm.

East Anglia One is being built 30 miles off the Suffolk coast, with the onshore cable route running 23 miles from Bawdsey to Bramford.

There are 50 excavation sites along the route, with some 400 archaeologists working on the project.

Experts said they have discovered "many layers of activity" at the "complex" 16,150 sq ft site near Ipswich.

ScottishPower Renewables, the energy firm behind the scheme, said project leaders were unable to recruit enough archaeologists from the UK and had to turn to Portugal to get more specialists.


Richard Newman and his team have been working on the 16,150 sq ft site near Ipswich since April


Up to 230 staff have been working on the site each week

Archaeologists have uncovered what is thought to be a bread oven, a corn drier and a broken millstone.

They think the buildings were used for seasonal work, and if the broken millstone is medieval they "can be sure" the site was occupied by the miller.

Experts have also unearthed later activity with an 18th Century quarry at the site.

Richard Newman, from Wardell Armstrong Archaeology, said the finds will be analysed further and detailed reports will be produced.

"It is safe to say we already know a lot more about Suffolk's history today than we did a year ago," he added.


Additional archaeologists had to be recruited from Portugal


Jo Young from ScottishPower Renewables said it was "important" to carry out the excavation works


East Anglia One is being built 30 miles off the Suffolk coast

Up to 230 specialists have worked on the site each week and 20 metal detectorists have been invited to work on the project.

Jo Young, from Scottish Renewables, said: "This wind farm is about the future, new technology and carbon-free living but we have to look at the past.

"That's the beauty of it, looking into the future and into the history of Suffolk."

Cabling will be laid once the excavation work is complete.

East Anglia One will have 102 wind turbines and is due to be operational by 2020.


A stone spindle whorl, said to be early medieval in date, was discovered by the team


Archaeologists think an uncovered green-glazed jug was made in East Anglia

Anglo-Saxon settlement found at wind farm cable site - BBC News
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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Yes, "carbon free living"
too bad THAT counts for sweet FA.

The best time in the last couple thousand years was when it was warmer then it is now.
So what people like that are saying is they are so stupid they will doom humanity to its grave so some lousy bankers can continue to fleece the flock...
They'll be diggin' 'em up in a few hundred years, if there is anyone left still alive then to still lift a whisk
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Yes, "carbon free living"
too bad THAT counts for sweet FA.

The best time in the last couple thousand years was when it was warmer then it is now.
So what people like that are saying is they are so stupid they will doom humanity to its grave so some lousy bankers can continue to fleece the flock...
They'll be diggin' 'em up in a few hundred years, if there is anyone left still alive then to still lift a whisk

The wind farm will cost £2.5 billion yet it will be completely and utterly useless, generating little power and having to be shut down when it's windy.

Rather than spending billions on "green" energy we should be spending billions on new nuclear and coal power stations.

Of course, the enviroMentalists will just go on ignoring all the common sense and just keep building their windmills until Britain is no longer able to generate electricity.
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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Well, that's what I mean, no offence to archaeologists in general, and the history is very interesting, but there is something to be learned from dead civilizations.
Mainly, WHY are they dead and gone?

This is all social manipulation - maurice strong, the guy who started this whole global warming thing, was fond of destroying industrialized nations - no power...no industry.

Where were these folks when Dyson had his exhaust/smoke stack cleaning tech up for the power generators and auto makers?
I know the auto makers decided it was cheaper to break the law and cheat on emissions...
So, what about the other creeps? I would expect they are just as criminal.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Well, that's what I mean, no offence to archaeologists in general, and the history is very interesting, but there is something to be learned from dead civilizations.
Mainly, WHY are they dead and gone?

This is all social manipulation - maurice strong, the guy who started this whole global warming thing, was fond of destroying industrialized nations - no power...no industry.

Where were these folks when Dyson had his exhaust/smoke stack cleaning tech up for the power generators and auto makers?
I know the auto makers decided it was cheaper to break the law and cheat on emissions...
So, what about the other creeps? I would expect they are just as criminal.

I think the climate in Roman Britain was warmer than it is now. Climate just changes naturally over the centuries. Nothing to do with human activity.