Through Stone, Bronze and Iron Ages to Roman Invasion
The picture shows a young archaeologist making a detailed drawing of a Roman pot sherd, having created a Bronze Age hut from a kit.
Young Archaeologists met at Roman Circus House to share their finds and treasures with us this morning. These included a piece of Roman tesserae, Roman, Greek and English coins, fragments of clay pipes, fossilised creepy crawlies in stones, and a vole skull. They also shared the stories of where the artefacts had been found. Some were handed on from grandparents. The finds were arranged in trays and taken round the room for everyone to look at and handle.
We had a presentation from two volunteers, who told a story depicting Bronze Age life and showed pictures of Stone Age, Bronze Age and Iron Age sites, which included, Skara Brae, Orkney, a Neolithic flint mine at Grimes Graves, Norfolk, and a Bronze Age copper mine at the Great Orme, Llandudno. The YACs were eager to share their site visits. One had visited the Bronze Age site, Must Farm at Flag Fenn, and brought in a "Bronze Age" pot she had made on the visit to show us.
After a refreshment break, last month's "cave paintings" were arranged inside our H-board shaped in a hexagon, members played Aquila, and coloured and decorated Bronze Age hut kits to arrange them in a "village". Pictures below.
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