Roman helmet update
Oct. 11th, 2010 11:38 pmThe fancy Roman helmet I posted about a few weeks ago was sold at the auction for 2.3 million pounds! Unsurprisingly, the amount raised by the Tullie House Museum wasn't near enough. A shame, as I guess that the buyer won't let the helmet be displayed at a public exhibition.
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Date: 2010-10-19 06:25 pm (UTC)And then, it is only relevant in 1- rescue archaeology (OK, this is 95% of archaeology...) 2- when you have really little time and a big surface, so you have to decide quickly where will be your priority, 3- for periods when there IS metal (I'm a neolithist ;) ).
I will have to disagree with you here (but, then, I'm a medievalist at heart): metal detecting of plough soil, which would normally just be scraped off prior to excavation, has helped to illustrate the large amounts of metal objects at high-status sites in Scandinavia, such as Uppåkra. That site is situated in a heavily agricultured land, and the actual features below the plough soil contain comparatively very little evidence of fine metal working. And since Uppåkra is a research excavation, they have had time to go over the fields for many seasons.