Thursday, 29 October 2009
Wednesday, 28 October 2009
Today was our first full day at Fairfield, and we began by excavating Trench 1. One team was levelling out one end of the trench, another troweled along the line of the wall, whilst the other picaxed the layers in the robber trench. We only succeeded in finding a few bits of bone and pot. After lunch, we went round to the side of Fairfield House, into one of the orchards, and examined the walls. We were looking for any noticeable features and changes in the walls history, such as archways or collapses. Most of the team went back to the trench whilst some washed finds and two finished surveying the wall. Whilst digging in the afternoon, we found a strip of bent metal. We then returned to Kilve and had a talk by Vanessa Fells on scientific techniques used in archaeology.
The Kilve team
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Today we were shown around the site by Alan and we did some troweling. Alan told us about using layers on a site, which help us to interpret it. We didn’t find much today but we are hoping to by the end of the week. We met and we all think we will make a good team.
The kilve residential group
Sunday, 25 October 2009
Attentive students from Bridgwater College looking at the re-excavated and extended Trench 1.
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More of the new trench has been cleared back and the 'corner' of the wall can be seen clearly. The soil outside this feature is completely clean while inside is full of stone. The baulk in the middle is protecting a later pipeline, which is still in use.
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Students continued with the Garden Wall survey. This photo shows the join between an older and a newer stretch of wall, and an arched gateway.
Thursday, 22 October 2009
Yesterday only Adele and Alan were on site: no students, and I was giving a talk about the Fairfield Project in Minehead. But they'd been extraordinarily busy (with the aid of a JCB digger). When I arrived this morning two new trenches had been opened ....
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Alan has reopened and extended Trench 1, which we began in 2005 with our first Kilve Court group. It was carefully positioned to cut across the line of the wall shown on the earliest map of Fairfield, and over a later garden wall shown on one of the paintings. In 2005, we found evidence of a robbed wall, and another 'in situ' wall. There was also some redeposited clay suggesting that a feature had been dug deep into the subsoil, and some of the earliest pottery so far found on the site. This is quite different from the section of wall we are uncovering in Trench 6, so it is time to investigate it further, this time opening up a larger area.
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This is the second new trench, placed over the curving corner of the boundary feature as shown on the geophysical survey. Already you can see the curved line of the wall appearing. We now think that the wall was used to hold back the higher level of soil you can see on the right.
Today's Archaeology Degree Course students from Strode College also faced challenging weather, but eventually the rain stopped. Look hard, you can just see a rainbow!
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By the afternoon the sun was out. These students are making an accurate stone-by-stone drawing of a blocked opening in one of the garden walls.
Posted by RachelTuesday, 20 October 2009
Although the students were cold and wet they all worked very well and we cleared the whole area down to reveal the soil below the rubble and mortar layer.
Today they were also fortunate to be on site with Barry Lane who showed them how to carry out geophysics and let them carry out the process to look at part of the land where we have done no previous work to see if there was any evidence of the village of Fairfield.
By Adele
Monday, 19 October 2009
There is a great deal of pottery, concentrated in a few grid square, as well as glass, brick, some animal bone and one or two more unusual finds like a lead disc (we don't know what this is) and a piece of bottle glass stamped with (presumably) the maker's initials.
Then we set up a horizontal string line, using a spirit level, to begin on ameasured elevation drawing of a blocked doorway in one of the garden walls. The Bridgwater team quickly got the hang of this skill, despite the fact it was definitely getting colder!
For just one day we had some high tech GPS (global positioning systems) equipment on site. The surveyors were recording the roof of Fairfield house,to clarify the changes in the building and discover the oldest part of the house. They also took readings for some of the points on our site grid. They took the time to explain to the students how the specialist kit works. Today we had a youth group from Carhampton out to help with another part of our project. We were working in a field just outside Burton where we were carrying out some field walking; continuing from the section a small group of staff on the Fairfield project had covered on September 19th.
We got the children to help set up the grid from the two baselines I had set up before their arrival.
After we had part of our grid set up we got the children to walk each grid in pairs putting any finds into a bag. They were very good at spotting finds on the ground.Adele
Today we had a group of individual students on site to help us with our excavation.
We cleaned up the rubble layer and exposed the rubble ready of photos at the end of the day and planning on Monday. We also continued to clean back on the other side of the wall down onto patches of gravel so that the area we are excavating had been taken back to its full extent.
Today, with fewer students visiting the site, we had a chance to get out all the finds from field walking in 2007. Here is Naomi checking the records, to make sure that the bag numbers tally with the field notesThursday, 15 October 2009
Today we had a group form Rednock School in Gloucestershire
Like yesterday we continued to clean back in Trench 6 onto the cobbaled surface. In the afternoon the surface became more uneven and damaged until it disapeared and we found a very uneven rubble layer which we will continue to clean up tomorrow.

A level History students from Rednock School eating lunch in the site hq. Despite the lack of sunshine today they kept up a good pace of work in trench 6.
Adele
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AdeleTuesday, 13 October 2009
Monday, 12 October 2009
We focused on cleaning in trench 6 today and begin to reveal a hard compact possible yard surface.
We also exposed the edge of our wall allowing us to see its direction across the trench and beyond. This will allow us to investigate the other side of the wall and establish what was happening there.
adele
Sunday, 11 October 2009
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Another task was to collect together all our equipment and start to transform the Fairfield garage into our site hq. The height of luxury - we have running water and elecricity!!Bob Croft (Somerset County Archaeologist) is stacking up wheelbarrows, lent to us by Somerset Heritage.
This is trench 6, which we will be excavating first. It has been open to the elements all year, so it needed a good tidy-up to be ready for Monday.We began working on it last year and have doubled its size for this season.
Trench 6 is very important and here is Adele's moment of triumph when, on the last day of last season (it always happens like this in archaeology) she first uncovered the footings of the wall we have been searching for since the dig began in 2005. You can just see it along the line of the ranging pole.
This map from the 1750s shows the mystery boundary feature we have been searching for. It is the only map on which it appears.
Fairfield House, enjoying its last days of peace and quiet before the diggers arrive.