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Showing posts with label Prehistoric Cymru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prehistoric Cymru. Show all posts

Tuesday, 14 June 2016

Dehongli ac ymweld ag archaeoleg Ynys Sgomer





Louise Barker (yn pwyntio) yn gweithio gyda Swyddog Ymwelwyr Sgomer a gwirfoddolwyr o Ymddiriedolaeth Bywyd Gwyllt De a Gorllewin Cymru ar ymweliad diweddar ag Ynys Sgomer.
Mae archaeoleg Ynys Sgomer, Sir Benfro, wedi’i chadw’n arbennig o dda. Ar draws yr ynys gellir gweld olion ffiniau wedi’u creu â chlogfeini, waliau cerrig taclus, a sylfeini tai crwn. Dengys y rhain i lawer o’r ynys gael ei ffermio yn ystod yr Oes Haearn a’r cyfnod Brythonaidd-Rufeinig rhwng 2,000 a 2,500 o flynyddoedd yn ôl. Mae maen hir amlwg, Maen Harold, a megalithau eraill yn awgrymu bod pobl yn byw yma yn llawer cynharach na hyn, yn yr Oes Neolithig a’r Oes Efydd Gynnar.
Tŷ crwn o’r Oes Haearn neu’r cyfnod Brythonaidd-Rufeinig yn y Wick ar Ynys Sgomer. Golwg yn dangos y drws.
Yn sgil arolygon archaeolegol a chloddiadau newydd gan y Comisiwn Brenhinol, ar y cyd â chydweithwyr o Brifysgol Sheffield, Prifysgol Caerdydd a Cadw, mae Ymddiriedolaeth Bywyd Gwyllt De a Gorllewin Cymru, sy’n rheoli Sgomer, yn gobeithio gwella’r arwyddion ar yr ynys a’r wybodaeth am ei harchaeoleg yn ystod 2016.

Tua diwedd Mai, teithiodd Louise Barker a Toby Driver, archaeolegwyr y Comisiwn Brenhinol, i Sgomer i gyfarfod â Leighton Newman, Swyddog Ymwelwyr Sgomer, a Hannah, gwirfoddolwraig ers blynyddoedd, i siarad am archaeoleg yr henebion cynhanesyddol mwyaf gweladwy. Gobaith Leighton a Hannah yw adnewyddu rhannau o Lwybr Hanes Sgomer, a sefydlwyd gyntaf ar ôl gwaith a wnaed gan yr Athro John Evans yn y 1980au.

Mae un o’r tai crwn cynhanesyddol mwyaf hygyrch a thrawiadol yn Sir Benfro i’w weld yn y Wick, yn agos at un o’r prif wylfannau Palod. Gosodwyd arwydd newydd yno i ddangos safle’r tŷ. Gall ymwelwyr gerdded i mewn i sylfeini’r tŷ crwn, drwy ei borth amlwg, a dychmygu’r olygfa ddomestig o fewn ei furiau ddwy fil o flynyddoedd yn ôl.
Un o’r arwyddion newydd sy’n gwahodd ymwelwyr i archwilio’r tŷ crwn cynhanesyddol yn y Wick.
Mae’n bosibl bod gan y tŷ wal o blethwaith a choed a tho conig yn wreiddiol. Er bod coed ar gyfer adeiladu yn brin ar Ynys Sgomer yn yr Oes Haearn, gellid fod wedi cludo pyst, polion a defnyddiau adeiladu eraill i’r ynys ar gwch. Mae’r Comisiwn Brenhinol yn parhau i weithio gyda’r Ymddiriedolaeth Bywyd Gwyllt i godi ymwybyddiaeth o drysorau archaeolegol Sgomer. Os hoffech ymweld ag Ynys Sgomer, ewch i’r wefan: http://www.welshwildlife.org/skomer-skokholm/skomer/

Gan Toby Driver, RCAHMW


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Thursday, 25 February 2016

Excavations on Skomer Island, Pembrokeshire






On Friday, 4 March 2016, Dr Toby Driver FSA of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales will give a talk to the Pembrokeshire Historical Society on the recent excavations on Skomer Island.

Skomer is a highly protected landscape famous for its puffins and other breeding seabirds, but it is also home to some of the best preserved prehistoric field systems and hut settlements anywhere in Britain. In April 2014 a small team of archaeologists was permitted to open the very first modern excavation trench in the island’s history, to retrieve dating and environmental samples to better understand the long and complex history of prehistoric settlement and farming on Skomer. This followed three years of collaborative, non-invasive research between staff of the Royal Commission, The University of Sheffield and Cardiff University, working closely with the Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales and CADW.

Excavations in 2014 at a prehistoric mound of burnt and fire-cracked stones on north Skomer, once used to boil water for cooking, have produced the first calibrated radiocarbon dates for farming settlement. The mound sealed a land surface dated by charcoal to between 751-408 BC, the early Iron Age. A cattle tooth deposited in the cooking mound was dated to around 85 BC, the late Iron Age.

The talk will look at the special landscape and archaeology of Skomer, and touch upon the other Pembrokeshire Islands. It will take the audience through the challenges and excitement of opening an excavation trench on a windswept island, and what new information this long running project has told us about the history and people of ancient Skomer.

Venue: The Picton Rooms, The County Hall car park, Haverfordwest.
Date: Friday 4 March 2016 at 7.30 p.m.
For further information : ann.sayer@btinternet.com
Members free, Non-members welcome £3 at the door.




Note to editor: The photographs show prehistoric field systems and settlements on Skomer Island. If they are used, please use the following credit: ‘Crown Copyright RCAHNW’


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Wednesday, 9 April 2014

First Modern Excavation on Skomer Seeks to Explore and Date Island’s Prehistoric Settlements





The Skomer Island Project team (L-R), Dr Oliver Davis (Cardiff University), Louise Barker (RCAHMW), Dr Bob Johnston (University of Sheffield), Dr Toby Driver (RCAHMW)
 
A collaborative research project between staff of the Royal Commission, The University of Sheffield and Cardiff University has just completed a third season of fieldwork and research on the renowned prehistoric landscape and national nature reserve of Skomer Island in Pembrokeshire, west Wales. This included the historic, first modern excavation in the island’s history, exploring a mound of burnt stone alongside a prehistoric settlement, which produced flintwork, datable charcoal and the first fragments of prehistoric pottery from the island.

Skomer is a heavily protected landscape famous for its puffins and other breeding seabirds, but it is also home to some of the best preserved prehistoric field systems and hut settlements anywhere in Britain. In 2011 the Royal Commission used airborne laser scanning (LiDAR) to map comprehensively the island’s field systems. This work discovered evidence for a longer chronology to the fields than had previously been thought. The Skomer Island Project built on this work in 2012 with the first use of geophysics on the island, which showed that unrecorded prehistoric fields and settlements survive beneath the modern fields in the centre of the island.

Despite two major studies of the island’s archaeology in the twentieth century, no modern excavation had been attempted. In order to refine a chronology, the team set out in 2014 to undertake the first modern excavation to locate buried charcoal and other evidence suitable for radiocarbon dating and scientific analysis. It was decided to target one of the many substantial mounds of burnt stone in the north of the island, which are found alongside the prehistoric hut groups, thought to have built up from cooking activities. Although few finds were encountered in the mound itself, a sealed soil layer was uncovered a metre down, which yielded charcoal, flint tools and fragments of prehistoric pottery. Excavations were recorded using Structure from Motion, a technique which builds individual photographs into a 3D digital model of the land surface. The hard work of post-excavation now begins to analyse the discoveries and learn more about prehistoric life on Skomer.



Accurately recording prehistoric finds and charcoal samples in three dimensions using GPS.

The Skomer Island Project team would like to thank the Skomer Island Wardens, the Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales and Natural Resources Wales for accommodating the archaeological work and granting permission to work in a Site of Special Scientific Interest. They are also grateful to Cadw for Scheduled Monument Consent, which allowed the work to proceed. The Royal Commission’s online records for the work can be found here.

By Toby Driver

 Further Reading:



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