TheGrandParadise.com Mixed What other items have been discovered at Flag Fen?

What other items have been discovered at Flag Fen?

What other items have been discovered at Flag Fen?

Flag Fen – Evidence & Finds

  • 300 examples of Bronze and Iron Age metalwork.
  • 4 complete and largely unused querns (corn grinding stones)
  • Shale bracelets.
  • Early Iron Age brooches, pins and ornaments (bent or damaged)
  • Animal bones (both from joints of meat and several Collie-sized dogs)

Why is Flag Fen a significant site?

Due to the waterlogged nature of the fens, this unique monument has been remarkably preserved. It is believed that the post alignment consists of 60,000 vertical timber and 250,000 horizontal pieces of wood, spanning the wet and marshy fen to meet a droveway on dry ground at each end.

When was Flag Fen built?

Flag Fen, east of Peterborough, England, is a Bronze Age site developed about 3500 years ago, consisting of more than 60,000 timbers arranged in five very long rows, creating a wooden causeway (around 1 km long) across the wet fenland.

Is Flag Fen English Heritage?

Currently listed by English Heritage as a Scheduled Ancient Monument, Flag Fen has been taken over by Vivacity Heritage, which is keen to restart stalled excavations.

What are the Lincolnshire Fens?

The Fens is an area of 400,000 hectares, stretching from Lincoln and Boston in the North, Cambridge to the South and Peterborough to the West. It includes large parts of the counties of Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire and smaller parts of Norfolk and Suffolk.

Where are the Fens in Lincolnshire?

Are the Fens sinking?

Since the major draining works began, the fenlands have fallen to such an extent that they reside substantially below sea level. With the lowering of the water table, the entire soil profile has shrunk like a dried-out sponge.

Why is it called fens?

tidal creeks, which reached from the sea into the marsh, the Townlands and in some places, the fen. They were named only if big enough to be regarded as havens. meres, or shallow lakes, which were more or less static but aerated by wind action. many rivers, both natural and (from Roman times on) artificial.

What did the Fens look like before they were drained?

A long time ago, the fens were watery marshes. They were wild, dangerous places filled with tall grasses and flat wetlands. There were also areas, or islands, of high land in the fens. Ely is sometimes known as The Isle of Ely because it was built on an island of solid ground surrounded by the marsh.

Who were fen people?

Fenland people used the marshy land to gather reeds, hunt wildfowl and fish. By losing this common land, they were also losing their livelihoods. Fenmen known as the Fen Tigers tried to sabotage the drainage efforts by smashing dams, destroyed dykes and breaking sluice gates which allowed parts of the fen to re-flood.

What stops the fens from flooding?

Habitat restoration work in the Great Fen will help to reduce the risk of flooding in the local area. New areas of the Great Fen will provide extra water storage during heavy rainfall, helping to protect surrounding towns, villages and farmland from the risk of flooding.

What is Flag Fen?

What is Flag Fen? A 1km wooden causeway built across marshy ground linking the island of Northey (Whittlesey) with Fengate (Peterborough). It was constructed between 900 and 1400BC and comprised more than 60,000 upright timbers and 250,000 horizontal planks.

How old are the boats in the Fens?

Eight bronze age boats surface at Fens creek in record find This article is more than 8 years old 3,000-year-old fleet discovered in a Cambridgeshire quarry on the outskirts of Peterborough The boats, which were deliberately sunk into the long-dried-up creek, have been well preserved and still show carvings

How much is the Flag Fen in Peterborough?

Annual Pass: £10 Adults, £5 Children, £25 Family. By Road:Flag Fen can be accessed from Jct 5 of the A1139 or via the B1040 from Whittlesey or Thorney, turning at the Dog in the Doublet Pub. Brown signs direct travellers from Peterborough but not from Whittlesey or Thorney.

Why visit Flag Fen archaeology park?

Visit Flag Fen Archaeology Park to explore how the prehistoric people of the fen lived over 3000 years ago. Wander through a Bronze Age village, sit within the reconstructed roundhouses, and stand where our ancestors once stood by the ritual causeway.