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pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
PCA
@pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
Commercial archaeological contractor with offices in Cambridge, Durham, London, Newark, Norwich, Warwick and Winchester.
Reposted by PCA
Hyde900 volunteers helping Dr Kevin Hayward and PCA to record medieval stone in abundance! We’re hoping to be able to add some more Abbey stones to our map: hyde900.org.uk/hyde-abbey/reuniting-the-stones
#hyde900
@winchester.gov.uk
@pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
#hydeabbey
#winchesteruk
June 17, 2025 at 6:23 PM
Reposted by PCA
More medieval stone processing for Hyde900 volunteers with Dr Kevin Hayward and PCA - and aided by a kind neighbour with a screwdriver just at the right time - thank you!
#hyde900
@pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
#hydeabbey
#winchesteruk
June 18, 2025 at 4:38 PM
For #FindsFriday a silver coin from a Late Iron Age site in Suffolk. It’s a rare Icenian issue from c.40–35 BC, only the 5th of its kind. The reverse shows a horse; the obverse a bust with a two-headed snake, an unknown design which adds a new thread to the story of Iron Age coinage!
#Archaeology
May 30, 2025 at 10:45 AM
Reposted by PCA
A few tens of millions of years ago this nugget of Baltic amber bobbed across the sea to arrive on British shores. Over a thousand years ago someone picked it up and began to turn it into a bead for a necklace, before losing it on our site at Skipsea. #FindsFriday #Skipsea2025 🏺
May 16, 2025 at 6:26 AM
Reposted by PCA
Two baked clay spindlewhorls and a fossil sea urchin (echinoid) found together at the base of an Iron Age storage pit during #Durotriges24

📷 July 2024

What will we find at #Durotriges25?

Stay tuned..

#FindsFriday #FossilFriday #FridayFinds #Archaeology #Dorset
May 16, 2025 at 7:02 AM
Reposted by PCA
#FindsFriday
One of most evocative #Roman London finds ever: leopard as ivory knife handle.
Tiny little thing <6cm long was buried 3-4 C in Southwark w 14 year old girl who originated from southern med.
Inspired @carolawrence.bsky.social time travelling kids' book. 🏺

📷 @pcaarchaeology.bsky.social
May 16, 2025 at 11:00 AM
This C17th onion bottle from the old Great Kitchen at Westminster School might be the one listed among the belongings of Mr Busby, a schoolmaster who died in 1653. A find that can be linked to a specific person adds an extra layer to the story, making the past feel that much closer! #FindsFriday
May 16, 2025 at 9:48 AM
For #FindsFriday, this Roman pipeclay figurine of one of the Matres (mother goddesses) feels fitting to share, as this week marked World Maternal Mental Health Day. This would have been kept in a household shrine fertility and protection for fertility and protection
#RomanBritain #Archaeology
May 9, 2025 at 11:46 AM
For #FindsFriday we're heading way back to the Lower Palaeolithic! This flake was found during a geoarchaeological evaluation in Swanscombe, known for its early prehistoric finds.

It came from Boyn Hill/Orsett Heath Gravels, so it's probably 430,000–350,000 years old! #Palaeolithic #Prehistory
April 25, 2025 at 11:05 AM
Reposted by PCA
What a fantastic site.
Chariots, flints and Neolithic buildings.
Archaeologists only a "bit bemused" also
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Prehistoric chariot wheel unearthed at Highland golf course - BBC News
Archaeologists describe the find near Inverness as "rare".
www.bbc.co.uk
April 23, 2025 at 5:49 PM
Reposted by PCA
Our Spring 2025 issue is out!

In Volume 17, Number 8:

Features:

Findspot: The aurochs skeleton from Ewell, Surrey @pcaarchaeology.bsky.social

Author, Author... London Archaeological Prize winner 2024 - Jonathan Gardner speaks to @bwallower.bsky.social

#London #archaeology 🏺
April 23, 2025 at 8:57 PM
Drone footage of PCA’s ongoing excavation at Moreton-in-Marsh, Gloucestershire. Phase 1 is under construction, Phase 2 is revealing a Romano-British ladder enclosure. Phase 3, just beyond the fence, might uncover the settlement itself!
youtu.be/LEdDdtN5EHI
#archaeology #RomanBritain
A Drone’s-Eye View of Roman Gloucestershire
YouTube video by PCA archaeology
youtu.be
April 24, 2025 at 11:11 AM
This Giant Spider Conch was found recently in a Victorian context in Shadwell, near the East End docks. It may be a sailor’s souvenir or part of a collection from Jamrach’s legendary emporium of shells and strange beasts which was just down the road. #archaeology #FindsFriday (a bit early!)
April 17, 2025 at 11:04 AM
This once-elegant copper-alloy mount, incised, moulded and pierced with tiny holes, came from a Romano-British pit in the Cotswolds. It was probably attached to a circular object, perhaps made of wood or leather. What could it have been?
#FindsFriday #archaeology #RomanBritain
April 11, 2025 at 9:44 AM
Reposted by PCA
🚨REMINDER 🚨

The 'Future of Prehistory' dayschool will be on the afternoon of Saturday 5th April

The day will run from 1-5.30pm, is online only and tickets are £10 for members and £20 for non members (plus Eventbrite fee).

Booking and further details: www.prehistoricsociety.org/events/2025-...
The future of prehistory | The Prehistoric Society
The final instalment in our series on the past, present and future of prehistory, looks forward to the future. By engaging with the latest research and future thinking ideas we will explore how the di...
www.prehistoricsociety.org
March 23, 2025 at 12:54 PM
Reposted by PCA
The unique Trichtingen torc consists of an iron core with a silver mantel. It’s too large and too heavy for human use (6.7kg), it was rather worn by a wooden cult image.
Dating 2nd/1st c. BC.

On display at Landesmuseum Württemberg

📷 me

🏺 #archaeology
April 4, 2025 at 9:39 AM
Reposted by PCA
#FindsFriday

A 3,400 year-old woollen cap from the Bronze Age!

So incredibly well-preserved it wouldn’t look too out of place if worn today!

Found in a man’s oak-log coffin grave at Trindhøj, Denmark, in 1861. National Museum of Denmark 📷 by me

#Archaeology
April 4, 2025 at 10:55 AM
For #FindsFriday, a Mesolithic tranchet axe from a site near Chichester. The site revealed evidence from the Neolithic to the Roman period, a landscape shaped and reshaped over time, with this axe as a small trace of its earliest inhabitants!
#Archaeology #Mesolithic #FlintFriday #Prehistory
April 4, 2025 at 9:33 AM
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Something a bit different for #FindsFriday!

‘Peckham Rock’ hoax cave art with authentic-looking label, installed without permission in the British Museum in 2005, by the street artist known as #Banksy

‘Found’ 3 days later in the Roman Britain gallery! 😳

Marker pen on lump of concrete! 😁

📷 me
March 28, 2025 at 9:55 AM
For #FindsFriday a silver fibula brooch from a Roman pit in Gloucestershire. The pit also yielded a copper alloy pin and wire. Verdigris from the copper clung to the brooch, making us think it was copper alloy too. But to our delight, a gentle clean with a dry brush revealed the silver beneath!
March 28, 2025 at 9:53 AM
PCA has uncovered a remarkable Neolithic cremation burial, adding a crucial piece to the puzzle of Neolithic Cambridgeshire. This discovery offers new insights into early funerary practices. Read more here: www.pre-construct.com/news/neolith... #archaeology #neolithic #prehistory
March 24, 2025 at 11:49 AM
For #FindsFriday on #NationalPerfumeDay, a Roman perfume bottle! The base is stamped S • V (or A). These marked phials came from imperial estates in Spain, France & Italy. Did it once hold an exotic or floral blend? We’ll never know, but smelling good never goes out of style!
#Archaeology
March 21, 2025 at 1:12 PM
For #FindsFriday, a 'Bartmann' jug from a Stratford site, with a bearded face inspired by the Green Man of folklore.
Tomorrow (15th), Harry Platts shares PCA's excavation results at LAMAS. Visit our stall to see some of the fantastic finds! bit.ly/4issWwt
March 14, 2025 at 11:42 AM
PCA Warwick have a new site in the Cotswolds which is looking promising! The team have found bone pins, a glass bead, and Romano-British pottery. The site lies on the edge of a settlement occupied from the Bronze Age to the Anglo-Saxon period, which may be the current town’s origins.
#Archaeology
March 12, 2025 at 1:44 PM
For #FindsFriday, an antler pick, typically used in the Neolithic period. This one from Suffolk, found with late Iron Age pottery, may have been repurposed for agriculture. Similar tools appear at hillforts like Danebury and Maiden Castle, showing continued use in the Iron Age. #archaeology
March 7, 2025 at 11:28 AM