Where's Mick? Half of the metal detecting duo praised by PAS for digging a deep signal below ploughsoil |
Sue said: "On two earlier visits I had received a large signal from this area which appeared to be deep iron and most likely not to be of interest. However, the uncertainty preyed on my mind and on my next trip I just had to investigate, and this proved to be third time lucky!" Sue, who along with other members of the Maidenhead Search Society metal detecting club had visited the site several times previously, initially unearthed two bronze bowls. Realising the age and significance of the find, she stopped digging and the Club, in line with best practice, registered this discovery with the Portable Antiquities Scheme. (PAS). The PAS Finds Liaison Officer for Buckinghamshire undertook a targeted excavation to recover the very fragile bronze vessels and, in the process, recovered a pair of iron spearheads suggested that the context was likely to be an Anglo-Saxon grave.All very nice and cuddly. Mike Lewis Head of the British Museum's Portable Antiquities Scheme is quoted,"This is a great example of archaeologists and metal-detectorists working together". If it is so great, then where are the records of the finds that Mick and Sue and all of their Maidenhead Search Society mates who visited this (barren?) site several times running? There is nothing, zilch. The Portable Antiquities database does not have a public record of any recording by finders anywhere in the region of Marlow. Something very wrong here with this public database - raising again the question on how reliable are the "data" it presents?
Also how "responsible" is it, being in a group of people that claim time-and-time again that they "only remove material from shallow depths in the ploughsoil" to go back to dig up a "large signal that appeared to be deep iron" when (a) its below plough level and (b) there are no funds to deal with it properly when the tejkkies start interfering with it? Is that what the Code of Best Practice for Responsible Metal Detecting in England and Wales says to do? The Code that the same Mike Lewis bellyaches all the time that he cant get enough detectorists to follow it? The same Mike Lewis that when somebody ignores it and digs something up that then prompts the need to mitigate the problem they've caused, pats them on the head and said this is a "great example" of best practice. WHAT actually is meant by this mythical and mutable "best practice", in British archaeology?
Reading University |
The burial was at a very shallow depth, making the excavation crucial to protect it from farming activity.
But then, they opened a trench (that looks like 10 x 15 m), so any other features outside that restricted area, the features that form the context of that single feature, are not going to be recorded before "farming activity" makes them illegible? Is that it? We don't really want to know the landscape context, just the hole that's got the goodies in? Without all that burdening context, it's easier, isn't it, for British archaeologists to make up stories about how important this discovery is. Hooray.
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