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Parracombe Project: Holworthy Farm - Terry Green
(Newsletter No 4 Autumn 2002)
This site, which is not scheduled, represented an opportunity to investigate by excavation a possibly prehistoric element of the landscape. In order to help with funding, our fund-raiser Richard Beer had successfully applied for money from the Council for British Archaeology to pay for a geophysical survey on the earthwork, which is located in the field known as Greenwell to the north-east of our fieldwalking area. On two days in June, Ross Dean ofSubstratum conducted a resistivity survey of the earthworks and immediate surroundings with encouraging results. The plot confirmed the existence of an oval feature with a possible entrance and what appeared to be a ditch. Interestingly, a group of dowsers, who spent a day on the site, suggested - without prior knowledge - an entrance in more or less the same location.
On 15th July - a very hot day - a team of volunteers gathered to begin a limited excavation (an evaluation) on the enclosure. The excavation lasted six days, during which three trenches were opened up. Trench 1 was placed across the linearfeature, trench 2 across the edge of the enclosure and trench 3 in the area which, it was thought, might represent an entrance. The linear feature turned out to be a spread of stones, almost all of Hangman grit (the local Devonian sandstone), and all showing signs of weathering. At the core of the spread was a more regular structure of large stones which may have represented the revetment of a natural ridge perhaps to form a lynchet. Trench 2 revealed a spread of the same stone, which, when picked apart, seemed to represent the remains of a stone bank about 3 metres in width. There was no sign of a ditch, though there was one post-hole on the “outside” of the bank. Trench 3 cut across the enclosure bank where it exploited the natural ridge. Here the stone-work was more substantial and on the “inside” there was a surface of closely packed small stones which was interpreted as metalling. There was noclear sign of an entrance. The only datable finds from the three trenches were two sherds of medieval pottery from the topsoil and a small number of flint beach pebbles, some with a preparation flake removed. These might be thought to represent mesolithic activity. On the face of it, the evidence which we recovered leads to no clear conclusions. The huge amount of weathered stone in the structure suggests the result of initial ground clearance ahead of cultivation. The lack of a ditch was unexpected, but as the enclosure appears to be built of stone, like a ring-cairn, rather than earth, there would have been no need to dig one. There seems to be nothing defensive about the structure, either against people or against stock. The couple of medieval sherds suggest that the ground was ploughed in the medieval period, which might explain the bank or lynchet. Without further investigation, no date can be suggested for the enclosure.
Fieldwork, Summer 2003: (Newslatter No 5 2003) Parracombe During March Ross Dean conducted a magnetometry survey on the hillslope enclosure with very interesting results. These have encouraged us to plan a further excavation on the enclosure this July. By the end of the year, therefore, we shall have data from a variety of surveys as well as from excavation, which will enable us to begin to understand landscape development on this fringe of the parish.
Parracombe Project: Holworthy Farm 2003- Terry Green Field Boundary Survey:
In the 19th century William Smyth described the farm as poor and this may account for the less elaborate treatment of the boundaries. Another clear difference is the presence of a number of corn-ditches. This term, first used by Fleming on Dartmoor, refers to earth banks with a profile like a right-angled triangle. On the side looking away from the cultivated land is a vertical face armed with stock-proof coping ( a jutting course of flat stones near the top) and with a ditch at the base.
The Society owes its thanks to all those who helped with the excavation. In particular, lifting the pot was a great success, and I must thank Alistair Miller, Roger Ferrar, Derry Bryant, Janet Daynes and Gordon Fisher for their valuable efforts. Thanks are due also to all who assisted in the dig; once again the co-operation of Phil and Julie Rawle of Holworthy Farm was invaluable.
This year’s excavation had its difficulties, but nevertheless our small, but reliable team gathered enough evidence to raise questions that need to be answered by further excavation in the future. Field Boundary Survey at Holworthy Farm: The Results - Terry Green (Newsletter No 7 2004) In previous editions of the NDAS Newsletter there have been several references to the fieldboundary survey being conducted within the Parracombe Project. The aim of this activity is to ascertain whether it is possible, through objective analysis of the features of the very prominent hedge-banks, to develop a tool which will help us to unravel the evolution of the Parracombe fieldsystems.
Measuring width at base, width at top and height gives the dimensions
of a cross section which is essentially a trapezium the area of which
is given by the formula h x (b+t)/2 (where h = height, b = base, t = top).
As few hedge-banks are situated on level ground, the height taken on both
sides has to be averaged, ie. (h1+h2)/2. To provide a formula that will
accommodate the majority of sites, four dimensions should therefore be
taken: the height on both sides of the boundary, the width of the base
of the boundary taken on a horizontal from the base of the shortest side,
and the width across the top of the boundary. From these measurements
the following formula (the area of a trapezium x 1) will give you a figure
for the volume in cubic metres of a one metre length of the boundary:
[(h1+h2)/2 x (b+t)/2] x 1 (see Figure 1). The result will be to a decimal
point. This is then rounded to the nearest whole number (up or down) producing
the basis of a simple numerical classification: Classes 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,
etc based on volume.
If we now split up Class 3, consigning its lower end (2.6m3- 2.9m3 ) to a class of slighter boundaries and its upper end to a class comprising all boundaries of 3.0m3 per metre and over, we find that almost all the heavy boundaries lie together in the area which retrogressive map analysis would suggest is the early heart of the enclosed land. Does the analysis of field boundaries contribute anything new, therefore? Well, yes. It not only provides a physical complement to retrogressive map analysis, but can also spring surprises. Holworthy provides two examples. Firstly, to the north of the early core of Holworthy land were formerly three fields (now two) which in the Tithe Apportionment are named West, East and Higher New Ground.West and East have slighter boundaries than those in the core, but Higher New Ground stands apart, having heavy hedge-banks all round (apart from on its northern edge where there is a cornditch). Map analysis might suggest, and now the boundary analysis seems to confirm that this is an earlier enclosure that has been incorporated into the ‘New Ground’, whenever that occurred. Secondly, the class 7 boundaries include one which, on the Tithe Map, is recorded as a narrow strip of woodland. It is in fact a bank, however, measuring almost 5 metres through the base and 2 metres high with stone facing on both sides. It is one of the few which includes mature holly and is the only one with established bluebells. This looks more like a remnant of woodland and may represent an old wood bank remaining from before the development of Holworthy Farm, which is first recorded in 1213. This suggests that the farm may have been created through land clearance in the 12th/13th century. Finally, on the subject of hedgerow species, people who know of the so-called Hooper rule, in which counting the species is supposed to provide an indication of age, will be interested to learn that the heftiest, apparently oldest boundaries are on the whole more species-rich than the more lightweight, younger examples. But, the species are still relatively few in number comprising at most seven, but including fast growing weed species such as elder, sallow and sycamore. Apart from beech, which has been a popular choice for hedgerow planting since the 18th century, ash is the dominant species, many examples of which appear to be very old, having repeatedly grown out from massive stools. Oak is almost entirely absent.
From the Bottom Up: Restoring the Holworthy Pot - Helena Jaeschke (Newsletter No 7 2004) From pictures taken and descriptions provided before the pot was removed from the ground, we already had a good idea of the nature of the object. Nevertheless there’s always an intense amount of examination and discovery when an object first arrives at the conservation lab. In this case the object arrived from the excavation boxed in its soil block and protected in a plaster case. Our first move was to invert it, place it on a padded surface and carefully remove soil to reveal the base and assess its condition. After several thousand years in a wet, acidic environment, the ceramic was very fragile. This is usually the combined effect of the clay having been fired to a rather low temperature and the dissolution of some of the temper used in its manufacture. If the pot had been allowed to dry out, the ceramic could have shrunk and crumbled away. To prevent this, the wet ceramic needed to be consolidated with a resin which provides strength as the water evaporates. The resin must be able to penetrate the ceramic evenly and remain stable, without changing colour, size or strength. For preference it must also be easily removable in future. Fortunately an excellent stable resin is available: Primal WS 24 is a colloidal dispersion of an acrylic resin, which can be diluted with distilled water for application, and which is soluble in acetone when dry. This solution was used on the Barnstaple kiln which was excavated in 1988 and is displayed in the Museum of North Devon. As the soil was removed from the base, it was possible to see the nature of the surface on which the pot had been placed. Stones were found touching the base and sides, as though it had been laid on a stony surface, possibly in a stone-lined depression. When all the external soil had been removed (and bagged for later sieving) it was possible to see the size and shape of the pot, still upside down (see photo). The pot was then turned right way up and supported while the soil inside was removed and put in separate bags for later examination. The only evidence of the vessel’s use was a dark ring visible on the outside of the base. Consolidation was continued as each new area was exposed. When all the soil had been removed from the surfaces of the pot and the consolidated ceramic had dried, the individual sherds could be cleaned with swabs of acetone. Although many of the fragments were in situ when found, they were separated by soil and roots which had to be removed before the pieces could be reattached. The cleaned sherds were joined together using a viscous solution of Paraloid B72, an acrylic copolymer resin. The stray sherds which had been separately removed from the ground were treated the same way, but were carefully numbered to show their original positions. Some joins were found between the sherds, but few could be found to join the actual pot. This was frustrating as these sherds included a fragment of rim and some decorated with diagonal parallel incisions. Once the main pieces had been joined, some gapfill was necessary to give the pot sufficient strength to withstand handling and display. The edges of the gaps which would be filled were protected with a thin layer of Paraloid B72. The gaps were then filled with Polyfilla, a commercial blend of plaster of Paris with cellulose powder. This was shaped and then painted with powder pigments mixed in a solution of Paraloid B72 in acetone to provide an overall match which can clearly be distinguished from the original. It is hoped that future work may enable more joins to be made and the rest of the pot to be rebuilt.
The reconstructed pot is now on display in the Museum of Barnstaple and North Devon. Summer 2004 Excavations at Holworthy Farm - Terry Green (Newsletter No 8 2004)
On 19th July 2004, 20 volunteers including members of NDAS and of TAG as well as four students from Exeter University gathered together at Holworthy Farm, Parracombe to begin the season’s excavation on the Holworthy hillslope enclosure. The weather was benign, tented accommodation had been provided by RMB Chivenor, portaloos had arrived, the proposed trenches had been mechanically deturfed and sheep and cattle were kept at bay by a very effective electric fence. This year we were employing a site supervisor in the person of Dr Martin Gillard of English Heritage and Exeter University who freelances as an excavator. Martin brought with him four student volunteers from Exeter, Sam, James, Nick and Flick (Felicity!) who were comfortably accommodated in a barn at Walner Farm. In addition, Martin’s partner Genna had baked a cake which was ceremonially doled out with a (clean) trowel at the first morning teabreak. Things were off to a good start and in general were to stay that way. Since the 2003 evaluation trenches had turned up evidence of Bronze Age occupation, the plan for 2004 was to open up a larger area so that the pottery and gully feature previously exposed could be seen within a broader context. In addition we wanted to explore the nature of key features of the site highlighted by Ross Dean’s magnetometry 5 survey. This meant open-area excavation as well as trenches, and consequently the Society was into its first full-scale excavation on a potentially very important site. Fortunately we were also blessed with a goodly quantity of enthusiastic volunteers (some 30 in all) from NDAS and from TAG and from the general public. They all deserve our heartfelt thanks for their hard work. In this regard, our thanks go again to Phil and Julie Rawle of Holworthy Farm for permission to dig and to Fred, Sue and Robbie Rawle for permission to access the site across their land.We also wish to thank Phil and Jean Griffiths for providing accommodation for the students and for allowing us to hold our barbecue at Walner Farm at the end of the Open Day. Thanks also go to RMB Chivenor for the loan of tents and of men to put them up. The Excavation:
Trench 2 was an open area laid out 10.0m x 10.0m in the NE quadrant of the enclosure. The purpose of this was to pursue the implications of the Middle Bronze Age pottery vessel and of the length of gulley filled with charcoal and charcoal stained soil found in 2003. This area lay across a slight platform which had been previously identified by earthwork survey and which included possible areas of burning activity identified by the geophysics. Trench 3 was laid out 12.0m x 1.5m to the NE of Trench 2. Like Trench 1, the purpose here was to explore the linear feature identified by geophysical survey and to ascertain its relationship to the enclosure. Trench 4 was laid out 4.0m x 4.0m at a distance of 30.0m NW of Trench 2 in an area where geophysical survey had indicated a number of linear features which suggested small rectilinear enclosures, possibly ditched or fenced paddocks or small arable fields. In addition the linear feature to be explored in Trenches 1 and 3 also reached this far and crossed the edge of one of the “enclosures”. The purpose here, therefore, was to examine this junction of features. The Results:
A considerable number of post-hole features were identified.
Prominent among these were six, ultimately seven large postholes which
were stone-lined and clearly formed two thirds of a circle. It is assumed
that these represent the major supporting posts of a roundhouse, which
was probably 12m-13m in diameter. The vessel found in 2003 would have
been within this structure. Near to its location a quantity of pottery
sherds were found mostly in association with a shallow scoop containing
charcoal or carbonised wood. Within the area of the apparent roundhouse
we also found a small saddle-quern, a clay loomweight and - in a post-hole
– a stone tool which may have been used for leather-working. Other
post-holes identified may represent divisions within the roundhouse, but
more convincingly show a relationship with the charcoal-filled gulley
which could pre-date the roundhouse. Other postholes were found sealed
beneath what appears to be redeposited material and may date from a period
before the enclosure was made. Interestingly a number of the major post-holes
were sealed off with a large stone placed in the centre, as if, on abandonment
of the site, the posts had been removed and the post-holes
Trench 4: Provisional Conclusions: Possible Future Work: Higher Holworthy The following bodies helped NDAS to fund the Holworthy
Excavation in 2004:
The Holworthy Project: Progress and Plans -Terry Green (Newsletter No 9 2005)
During the winter, examination of material recovered
in the excavation at Holworthy Farm in 2004 has thrown up some very gratifying
results. Four gross samples were selected for examination, one from a deposit of burnt material beneath the stones forming the enclosure bank (108), one from a small scoop which contained pottery sherds and charcoal (215) and one from the gulley or trench which snaked through the roundhouse site and had a charcoal-rich fill (208). These were sent first to Rowena Gale for identification as to species and stage of growth, since short-lived species or sapwood are preferred for dating. Then, with financial support from Exmoor National Park, three selected samples were sent to the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre in Glasgow.We had to wait two months for the results, but they were worth waiting for. Sample 108 produced a date of (calibrated) 3360 +/- 50 BP; sample 215 gave a date of (calibrated) 3130 +/- 40 BP; and sample 208 came out at (calibrated) 2990 +/- 60 BP. Carbon 14 dating can be unreliable, and more dates will be needed before we can be fully confident, but on the face of it we have a daterange of about 1,400 BC to 1,000 BC, which places our site in the Middle to Later Bronze Age, as the pottery had already suggested. We have also been able to make some deductions about the Bronze Age environment of the site. From the identification of the charcoal we can say that oak, hazel and willow (presumably sallow or goat willow) were present in the vicinity. Further clues have been provided by pollen recovered from the fill of the gulley. A ‘tinned’ sample was sent to Heather Tinsley of Bristol University who reported that, although the pollen preservation was poor, she could identify oak, hazel, alder and pine, thus adding to the picture of the Bronze Age tree cover. Among herbaceous species she identified principally dandelion, ribwort plantain, daisy and buttercup suggesting disturbed ground around the site, and heather, grasses and fern suggesting an open, grassland environment. She also found roundworm eggcases, which could have come from pigs, but more likely came from people. Heather also found some cereal pollen, which fits nicely with the most recent discoveries. Before we left the site last summer we took bulk samples (40 litres at a time) from a number of contexts. These were to be sorted by flotation in order to extract any organic material, most likely charcoal fragments and other carbonised matter. For this we needed a flotation tank, but did not possess one. Asking around got us nowhere, so we had to provide for ourselves. To this matter David Parker set his mind and manufacturing skills, and, with the generous provision by Alpharma of Whiddon Valley of an empty drum and fine mesh, he succeeded in building a very useful piece of kit (see the accompanying article) with which to treat our samples. At David and Judy Parker’s house in Ilfracombe, a number of Society members spent several cold Saturdays processing the material and ending up with quantities of ‘flot’, the organic matter floated out. During the last couple of months, David has dedicated himself to sorting this material under a binocular microscope (lent by the Museum of Barnstaple and North Devon) and has succeeded in extracting quantities of carbonised seeds, fragments of hazel nut shell and plant fragments. None of these have yet been submitted to a specialist for identification, but among them are undoubted cereal grains, probably barley and emmer wheat, nicely complementing the cereal pollen found by Heather Tinsley. This is the first direct and positive evidence for prehistoric cereal cultivation in the Exmoor area, a first for NDAS! Finally, the carbonised wooden object, which was discovered beside the fire-gulley (see Autumn 2004 7,8) and which was lifted in a soil block, has been excavated from its block and stabilised by Richard Jaeschke. The work was difficult, as much of it is simply charcoal stained soil making a more or less defined shape. Freed from the soil and treated with stabilising chemicals, it is now a pretty unattractive assemblage of bits looking rather like burnt flapjack that has been trodden on! Nevertheless, two fairly large pieces do make sense and do seem to represent part of the body of a wooden bowl or dish.We have yet to get a specialist to look at it. In July this year we are planning to return to the site, probably for the last time. Starting on 4th July, we intend to excavate between 140 and 200 square metres inside the enclosure. The objectives will be to examine a geophysical ‘hot spot’ identified by Ross Dean, to examine the area below the edge of the house-platform, to look for signs of activity in the centre of the enclosure, to refine dating and add to the environmental evidence.We shall also extend trench 2 of 2004 northwestwards in order to identify further postholes and to try to trace a floor.We have again been successful in securing financial assistance from the Royal Archaeological Institute (£1000), Council for British Archaeology (£500) and North Devon District Council (£500).We are grateful to all of these for their support. Dr Martin Gillard will again be our site supervisor.We already have a good number of volunteers, but anyone else wishing to join in should contact me on 01271 866662. Finally, at the end of the main excavation period we shall be holding an Open Day at the site for NDAS members and the people of Parracombe. This will be on Sunday 17th July from 10.00 am to 4.00 pm. If you don’t know the site, there will be signs on the approach roads pointing you in the right direction. You will be asked to park on the roadside at SS 689445, from where you have a walk of about 400 metres downhill across grassland. I must point out that we are on private farmland and must, of course, observe all the usual countryside rules about shutting gates. Members Interest Articles: An A-Level Student's Thoughts of Holwell Castle, Mary Houldsworth (Newsletter No 9 2005) Holworthy Farm Excavation, July - August 2005 -Terry Green (Newsletter No 10 2005) Following the very successful NDAS Holworthy Farm excavation of 2004 – reported in previous newsletters - it was decided early in the year that in 2005 we should follow up by locating the remainder of the apparent roundhouse, exploring some of the interior of the enclosure and examining features highlighted by Ross Dean’s geophysical survey. Permission and approval were obtained, as before, from Phil and Julie Rawle, Rob Wilson-North; and DEFRA/ESA, while Fred and Sue Rawle once again allowed us to access the site across their land. The excavation was again supervised by Dr Martin Gillard who brought three students from Exeter to supplement the volunteers from NDAS and from TAG.We also had a volunteer from Gloucester who had seen the dig advertised in the Current Archaeology handbook. Derry Bryant took charge of funding, and was able to raise a total of £2,000 from The Royal Archaeological Institute, the Council for British Archaeology and North Devon District Council.We are grateful to these bodies for their support and must also thank RMB Chivenor once again for the loan of tents. Special mention must be made of Jim Knghts who was a logistical Mary Poppins, always seemingly able to come up with just what was needed!
The excavation was set for the two weeks from 4th to 17th July 2005. There was to be an open day on the final Sunday, 17th July. A barbecue was arranged for volunteers on the middle Saturday at Walner Farm., and we are once again grateful for the hospitality of Phil and Jean Griffiths.
The Excavation: When the excavation began on July 4th the team was initially divided between Trenches 1 and 3, work on Trench 2 not beginning until the ploughsoil had been hand-stripped from Trench 3 and it was ready for first recording. Removal of the ploughsoil in Trench 2 proved more arduous than had been expected and so at the end of the first week it was decided to reduce the area of this trench by 50%. This proved to be a good decision, but inevitably at the end of the fortnight there was still work to do and digging continued intermittently with a reduced team of NDAS members until 17th August. The site was finally closed down on Friday 26th August. Initial Results: Trench 2: Trench 3: Around 50 large and small soil samples were taken, most of them containing organic matter which we hope will provide additional dating and/or environmental evidence. To date the examination of the “flot” resulting from flotation has identified a substantial number of cereal grains together with fragments of chaff which suggests processing on site and probably the growing of grain nearby. Identification of other organic remains awaits specialist attention. There is a lot more work to done on the samples. Anyone wishing to volunteer their assistance, please phone David Parker on 01271 865311. We may conclude at this point that we have identified this hillslope enclosure as a Middle Bronze Age settlement surrounded by a substantial stone bank within which there was at least one major building. Cereal crops were grown nearby. The settlement was abandoned around 1000 BC. The features of Trench 2 offer a tantalising glimpse of activity and it is tempting to pursue the evidence in the direction of the enclosing bank, in the shelter of which most activity on the site appears to be concentrated. For the present however, it is necessary to consolidate what has been achieved.
Holworthy Farm Update Terry Green ((Newsletter No 11 2006) After four seasons of excavation at Holworthy Farm we are at the point where we either continue and turn it into a long-term project, collecting more and more data, which in the end gives us at best a partial picture of the birth, life and death of a single settlement; or we draw breath, assemble the data that we have and publish. Obviously there has been debate about this and the consensus is that the long term commitment would add little in the way of understanding, so for the present there will be no further digging at Holworthy Farm. At this point we are pretty confident about the date range of the site, we have environmental information and we are able to discuss function. At present all of the Holworthy pottery has been marked up and has been to Henrietta Quinnell so that she can estimate the work involved in writing a report. The single mass of sherds that came from our second “fire-trench” in 2005 has gone to conservators Richard and Helena Jaeschke to be stuck together. David Parker has completed the wet-sieving of the bulk samples taken in 2005 and has recovered quantities of carbonised organic matter, principally wood charcoal and a quantity of seeds and cereal grains – over 1,700 in all. Selected samples of the wood charcoal have been sent to Rowena Gale for species identification, and from among these, five samples plus a number of charred cereal grains have been sent to the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre (SUERC) for radiocarbon dating. Anne and Martin Plummer have agreed to write a report on the flints from the site and Sue Watts has agreed to report on the saddle-quern that we found in 2004. Not yet scheduled are the plant macro-fossils (seeds, plant fragments), the “wooden bowl” found in 2004, the loom-weights and an odd stone tool ( a sliver of fine-grained sandstone with a honed edge and one smooth face) that came from a post-hole. Meanwhile all the context details have been assembled on a data-base, and a start has been made on converting site drawings into digital form. As indicated above, since the last newsletter, the wet-sieving (flotation) has been completed and organic materials have been isolated. A most pleasing discovery was a substantial quantity of carbonised grain in one post-hole. Substantial is a relative term here – we have 3.9 gm or a small eggcupful – but nevertheless it is important, since the charred grain from Holworthy is the first direct evidence of prehistoric cereal cultivation in North Devon or Exmoor. Why there should be this deposit of burnt grain in a post-hole is a question that needs thinking about, especially as this was all the organic matter in this particular hole, while the neighbouring and inter-cutting post-hole contained a very large quantity of oak charcoal. Furthermore the grain was concealed beneath a flat stone in the base of the hole. As for wood, identified species include oak, hazel, willow, hawthorn, ash, birch and alder. The wooden bowl or platter (?) excavated in 2004 was of oak. Among the 21 charcoal samples that we have had identified, oak and hazel are by far the most frequently occurring, as one might expect, but ash occurs only once. This is interesting when you consider that ash is a very common tree in the local landscape today and that it makes very good firewood. I have recently discussed this with Dr Judith Cannell, an expert on woodland archaeology, who suggests that ash flourishes in open conditions such as hedgerows, which were probably not a feature of the local Bronze Age landscape. With the financial support of Exmoor National Park,
the samples for radiocarbon dating were sent to Glasgow in February. The
results, which have just come back, help to tighten the date range for
the features of the site, currently homing in on 1300 - 1400 BC, ie. Middle
Bronze Age, as was suggested by the pottery that was unearthed in 2003.
In fact a fragment of hazel charcoal found immediately beneath the 2003
pot is dated at around 1400 BC, as is charcoal found in association with
the mass of pottery found in 2005. A dated deposit found beneath the stone
bank makes it probable that the enclosure was built about 1600 BC, and
since the 2003 pot must have been left when the site was abandoned, it
seems we can narrow the period of occupation For the purposes of writing up and interpreting the site, we need to be able to place it in both a broad regional setting and in a local context where funerary monuments such as Chapman Barrows are a major feature, but nearby settlement remains on South Common are possibly more meaningful in terms of landscape development. For the purpose of such interpretation, we need to return to the Parracombe Project which got somewhat sidelined when Holworthy came along, but which offers a way to assess the landscape as a whole.
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