Sunday, February 2, 2020

Must Farm Bronze Age Settlement – Post Excavation (2)



Introduction
In earlier blog posts I wrote about the Must Farm settlement in Cambridgeshire, England, which is one of the most complete Late Bronze Age examples known in Britain. The settlement consists of four circular wooden houses and a square wooden structure, built on a series of piles sunk into a river channel below and seems to have been built around 1300 – 1000 BC. The settlement was destroyed, probably within a year, by fire.
The months of excavation work have now been followed by a series of detailed scientific investigations exploring the settlement in much finer detail. The results of this post excavation analysis so far are detailed on the Must Farm website. http://www.mustfarm.com/ In this blog post I thought it would be useful to take a cursory look at some of the most recent findings from this important ongoing work.
Close-up of post-excavation plan showing the positions 1,24 and 5
(c) Must Farm Website
Settlement architecture
 The four largest structures were circular, located side by side, in a roughly east–west alignment (structure 3, 1, 2 and then 5). There is no evidence of repair, replacement or the addition of timbers between construction and destruction of the settlement. The site’s untimely and calamitous demise means that archaeologists can investigate the undisturbed remains of an active, functioning pile-dwelling settlement.
Continuing tree-ring (dendrochronological) analysis of the structural timbers shows that the settlement was built in a single construction phase, using wood of a similar felling year.
The Palisade and Access
 Archaeologists have pointed out that Structure 4, which is the only square building, may have acted as a formal entrance or gate into the settlement. For example, this “gatehouse” could have functioned as a way of getting from the firmer ground of the riverbank onto the raised pile-structures of the settlement. Other examples of gates, entranceways or “towers” are known from similar European Bronze Age settlements.
The remains of a wooden bucket that contained scrap
bronze associated with Structure 4
(c) Must Farm Website
The sudden demise of the Must Farm settlement has provided glimpses of its distant past through the objects or groups of objects recovered. For example, the discovery of a charred wooden bucket that contained many fragments of heavily used or broken bronze artefacts may have been stored in Structure 4 waiting to be sent away, melted down and turned into new artefacts.
Artefacts
The fire that destroyed the structures at Must Farm, along with the waterlogged environment of the river channel below, helped create beneficial preservation conditions for the site’s archaeology. The inventory of material associated with the pile-dwellings consists of hundreds of Late Bronze Age items, including over 180 fibre/textile items,160 wooden artefacts, 120 pottery vessels, 90 pieces of metalwork and at least 80 glass beads.
A 3D model of one of Must Farm's large storage vessels
(c) Must Farm Website
Pottery
Pottery recovered from the Must Farm site was an amazingly complete variety of vessels, ranging from the smallest cups to large storage jars. Organic residue analysis will be carried out on over 100 individual vessels which should provide a valuable insight into the contents and uses of the range of Must Farm pots.
Querns
Analysis of the “querns” from the site has proved particularly interesting. Typically, querns are associated with the grinding of wheat to make flour and are made from tough stone. During the excavation archaeologists found the remains of several flint grindstones that had been shattered from the thermal shock of being heated by the fire and then falling into cold water.
 
Shattered remains of a quern from Must Farm
(c) Must Farm Website
Examination of the surfaces of the flint “querns” suggests these may have been used for working wooden objects, functioning in a similar way to a rasp or file. Given the large quantity of wooden artefacts at the site, these flint processing tools would certainly have been important.
Metalwork
 The Must Farm settlement has the UK’s largest Late Bronze Age collection of metalwork from a domestic context and includes axes, swords, spears, razors and more. Initial specialist work has revealed that some of the artefacts appear to have been made from the same mould.
Fibres and Fabrics (Photo/s)
 Must Farm’s collection of fibres, fabrics and materials associated with the production of textiles, was one of the site’s most exceptional types of artefact. Specialists have been studying the collection of finds since the excavation finished and the textiles are currently carefully being conserved. Researchers have made a series of excellent videos going into more depth about the different characteristics of the textiles which are available on the Must Farm website. http://www.mustfarm.com/post-dig/post-ex-diary-11-the-must-farm-textiles-part-one/
Illustration of one of the Must Farm textiles showing the weave
and thread direction
(c) Must Farm Website
Even though these items were made during the Late Bronze Age, almost three thousand years ago, their quality is comparable to some fabrics we encounter today. It is also unusual to find earlier stages of textile production alongside finished items at a Late Bronze Age site. These amazing finds, including delicate balls of thread, are helping researchers to unravel more information about fibre production during the Late Bronze Age. http://www.mustfarm.com/post-dig/post-ex-diary-12-the-must-farm-textiles-part-two/
The positioning of beads at the site seems to indicate that some
would have formed composite necklaces of amber, glass, stone and jet.
(c) Must Farm Website
Glass and Non-Glass Beads
 A variety of beads were found during the excavation of the Must Farm settlement with many made from glass. Specialist analysis of these artefacts is concentrating on their chemical composition to try and establish where they were made. Together with the glass examples, beads made from other materials were also recovered including amber, jet, stone and even one made potentially from tin. Researchers believe that the beads formed composite necklaces mixing glass and non-glass examples together.
Charred Plants Remains
 During the 2015-16 excavations at the pile-dwelling settlement several “caches” of seeds and grains were discovered including barley, emmer wheat and flax. Analysis suggests it is possible that these wheat, barley and flax plants were all growing in the same place.

Animal Remains
 Examining the animal bone has already started to provide additional insight into activities on the site. Three significant species present at the settlement were sheep (both lambs and adults), pigs and deer. Analysis suggests that the adult sheep were grazing in the surrounding drier ground. The lambs and their mothers were being given carefully chosen fodder and kept deliberately in the settlement.
Post-excavation investigation has already provided new insights into the Must Farm settlement and I’m sure we can look forward to further revelations about this unique Bronze Age site.
For further information please see:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3pIcINYdAI