BEACON HILL, MENDIP
BEACON HILL, MENDIP
Archaeology, Excavation, Round Barrow Excavation July 2007.
Figure 1. Location plan for Excavation Trenches 4 and 5.
In continuation of a programme of archaeological research at Beacon
Hill Wood, Shepton Mallet, further excavations were undertaken during
the first week of July to investigate the remains and condition of two
suspected prehistoric round barrows within the wood
(see Figure
1). Under the guidance and direction of archaeological consultant
Peter Leach, the project operates through the Beacon Hill Society,
with the support of The Woodland Trust (owners), and the Somerset
Aggregates Levy Support Fund. The project provides extensive
opportunity for community involvement and the participation of local
volunteers, including members of the Bath and Camerton Archaeological
Society, Charterhouse Environs Research Team, Frome Local History
Society, and students from Strode College, Street. Subsequent support
for scientific analyses has come from the Maltwood Fund of the
Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society and through the
Woodland Trust.
Both sites lie within the upper western part of the wood, close to the
main track and the seat, and were damaged by tree planting over 50
years ago. The larger mound to the north has long been identified as a
partly levelled round barrow mound surviving little more than 1m high
and with a diameter of 17-18m (PRN 23062; Ashwick 5 - Grinsell's
Somerset Barrows catalogue 1971). Excavation of a 2m wide trench from
its centre southwards
(TRENCH 4,
Figure 2) showed that the lower surviving part of the barrow was
constructed of laid turfs set upon the remains of an organic-rich
buried soil. This survived above clean weathered sand where protected
by the mound, but any further investigation of these deposits or areas
beyond the mound for features such as an outer ditch or satellite
burials was hampered by exceptionally wet ground conditions. Near the
centre of the barrow a large flat-bottomed pit had been cut into its
upper part and backfilled with many large blocks of the local Beacon
Hill sandstone. Despite extensive disturbance from earlier forestry
ploughing and animal burrowing, a small intact pit at its base
contained a decorated pottery funerary urn of Middle Bronze Age type,
sealed by a large flat sandstone slab.
This vessel was carefully lifted as a soil block to keep it intact,
and was transported to the laboratories of Wessex Archaeology Ltd at
Salisbury, for detailed dissection, analysis of its components and
reporting by their team of specialists, which is now completed
(Urn
Report
and Urn
Reconstruction Drawing). The pottery burial urn was a coarse,
bucket-shaped jar surviving 220mm high and with a rim diameter of
approximately 180mm, although the rim was degraded through pressure
from the sandstone capping slab. Although complete, the vessel was
fragmented - probably after its deposition - being of a coarse, poorly
fired fabric, tempered with grog (ground pottery/fired clay fragments)
and decorated with simple applied, finger-impressed cordons, one on
the shoulder and four vertical strips extending up to the rim. This is
identified as a vessel in the Middle Bronze Age Deverell-Rimbury
tradition, found commonly in the Wessex region, and compares closely
with pottery from Dorset and more locally from the Tadley Acres
development site at Shepton Mallet.
Within the urn were over 500g of cremated human bone representing the
probable remains of a young woman aged between 18 and 25. There was no
evidence of anything accompanying her, although remains of the funeral
pyre survived within and around the top of the urn, deposited
immediately after it had been set into the base of a shallow pit cut
into the earlier round barrow mound and then sealed by a freshly
quarried slab of local sandstone. Analysis of the pyre material
suggests that the cremation ceremony probably took place close by,
using mainly oak wood for a hotter fire, with some hazel, woody shrubs
and grass roots as kindling. The remainder of the shallow burial pit
had then been filled by a dump of tumbled sandstone blocks.
The pottery urn has already identified this as a burial of Middle
Bronze Age date, but completion of its processing has allowed a small
sample of the cremated bone to be submitted for Radio Carbon dating to
a laboratory in Scotland. A date around 1400 BC might be expected but
the result should be available by March of this year. The next step is
to commission a restoration of the pot to preserve it and facilitate
its future display. This will eventually be in the new County Museum
at Taunton but it is hoped to arrange for its display more locally in
the meantime.
Research is also underway into the local contemporary environment, as
reflected by samples taken for pollen identification. The acid soils
of Beacon Hill preserve this form of evidence well, and samples taken
from the barrow mound material and a buried soil deposit beneath it
are currently being analysed at the University of the West of England
in Bristol. It was apparent during the excavation that the barrow was
built largely of turfs, almost certainly cut locally, rather than with
the upcast from any surrounding ditch. Analysis of the pollen from
these should give a good impression of the local vegetation and
environment of this part of Mendip when the barrow was built, although
this was probably several centuries before the cremation burial was
made.
Less than 100m to the south a second trench was excavated to
investigate a low mound claimed by previous researchers as the site of
another prehistoric round barrow (PRN
23063, TRENCH 5,
Figure 3). In the event no such evidence was found, but instead
were located two alignments of tumbled stone blocks set at right
angles, within which were thin spreads of charcoal and scattered worn
stones indicating a floor level. This was associated with occasional
sherds of coarse Roman pottery, some iron nails and shoe hobnails. The
stone alignments suggest two sides of a rectangular building of
unknown full extent, possibly acting as supports for timber uprights,
all trace of which had vanished.
This unexpected discovery is best interpreted as evidence for
occupation on the hill during the Roman period, probably associated
with the stone-working quarries whose remains are still preserved
within the woodland. The latter have been the subject of previous
archaeological excavation sampling as part of this project, along with
attempts to locate and characterise the Roman Fosse Way road that
passes through the wood.
Much has already been learned through these discoveries, but even the
completion of ongoing work should not be the end of the story. The
cremation discovered in 2007 had been inserted into the top of an
earlier barrow, in all probability only one of a small contemporary
cemetery of such burials located on and around the barrow. There is no
current necessity to find or excavate these, but the barrow itself
deserves further exploration. The exceptionally poor summer of 2007
restricted the scope of our excavations then, but with the continued
backing of the Woodland Trust, financial grants, and above all the
commitment and enthusiasm of our local community volunteers and
societies, another season of excavation is proposed. The absence of
evidence for later excavation of the barrow argues in favour of the
survival of a primary burial in the centre of the mound, at or below
the original ground level. An attempt to locate this, in tandem with
more research on the barrow mound and the contemporary environment,
would be worthy objectives for fieldwork in 2008.
Peter Leach
Figure 2. Section through Trench 4.
Figure 3. Section through Trench 5.
Full report, by Wessex Archaeology Ltd, on the contents of the urn and sectional drawing of the urn.
Report on the carbon dating analysis of the contents of the urn.
Report on the pollen analysis of soil materials recovered during excavation.
January 2008
Copyright © 2008 Beacon Hill Society, 2000-2008 P Banks, 2008 J Back. All rights reserved.