The winners of this year’s Current Archaeology Awards were announced on Saturday 28th February as part of Current Archaeology Live! 2026. The…
Who did what, where, when – and why? Oxford Cotswold Archaeology’s ongoing excavations on the site of the planned Sizewell C power…
Following on from last month’s column, here of south-east England: a series of fortifications on both sides of the English Channel that…
The Saxon Shore (litus Saxonicum) was a military command consisting of fortifications built on both sides of the English Channel, which were…
Examining a well-connected Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Broughton Lodge The diverse grave goods excavated at a 6th-century cemetery in Nottinghamshire testify to a…
Exploring the archaeology of Ben Lomond Ben Lomond is one of Scotland’s most famous mountains, lying on the edge of the Highland…
Last month’s column explored prehistoric mines, and this month I will follow up on the topic by visiting medieval and modern examples…
Since CA 428, my columns have focused on prehistoric Britain, and while researching these I read about a series of mines dating…
Earliest evidence of humans making fire discovered in Suffolk Excavations at East Farm, Barnham, have uncovered the oldest-known traces of deliberate fire-making…
For my third and final column on the Palaeolithic, I will clamber into some of the most famous caves in the country.…