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Plot 5000 Western Approaches Distribution Park Avonmouth & Investigation of the Lower and Middle Wentlooge Formation, and further excavation of a later Romano-British farmstead at Henbury Level (Plot 5000, Western Approaches Distribution Park, Avonmouth, South Gloucestershire) South Gloucestershire

Murray, Paul and Champness, Carl Plot 5000 Western Approaches Distribution Park Avonmouth & Investigation of the Lower and Middle Wentlooge Formation, and further excavation of a later Romano-British farmstead at Henbury Level (Plot 5000, Western Approaches Distribution Park, Avonmouth, South Gloucestershire) South Gloucestershire. [Client Report] (Unpublished)

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Abstract

Oxford Archaeology (OA) was commissioned by John Samuels
Archaeological Consultants, on behalf of Gazeley UK Ltd, to carry out a
field evaluation at Plot 5000, Western Approaches Distribution Park,
South Gloucestershire (NGR 5499 8348). The work was carried out as a
condition on a planning application for warehouse development,
associated offices and car parking facilities. The work was carried out in
November / December 2006.
Eight geoarchaeological boreholes and three auger holes, thirtyone
evaluation trenches and two small open area investigations, were
excavated.
The borehole survey and assessment of geotechnical records have
allowed the post-glacial sediment sequence in Plot 5000 to be modelled.
Successive peat horizons have been identified, which have good potential
for the preservation of biological remains. The cores are likely to be
suitable for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction from the Mesolithic
period onwards. Specialist assessment and radiocarbon dates would be
required to establish the potential of the cores for detailed analysis.
The evaluation identified Roman activity on the northern edge of
the site, focussed on trench 22. An area to the west of trench 22, and an
extension to the east were excavated to define the extent of activity. This
revealed ditches and gullies forming an enclosure and its sub-division. A
significant quantity of finds was recovered from this trench, dated to the
later Romano-British period (2nd to 4th century AD). Further Roman pits
and ditches were identified in trenches 18, 26, 30, 31, 32 and 33. The area
of Roman activity coincides with a high point in the underlying
Pleistocene topography (as defined by the surface of the Mercia
Mudstone). The present site topography is almost flat, but the underlying
geology may have influenced surface drainage patterns, creating a slightly
dryer area suitable for settlement.
Ridge and furrow is clearly visible in fields to the south, but does
not extend into the evaluation area, possibly having been levelled by
modern groundworks. Undated ditches were present throughout the site,
many respecting the alignment of extant drainage ditches. Most are likely
to be field boundaries and drains of post-medieval and modern date. They
are not considered archaeologically significant.
Excavation
In 2007 Oxford Archaeology carried out a staged field investigation at Plot 5000 of
the Avonmouth Western Approaches Distribution Park on behalf of Gazeley UK Ltd,
through the agency of CgMs/John Samuels Archaeological Consultants in relation to
a planning application for warehouse development, associated offices and car
parking facilities.
The development area is located within the Avonmouth Levels, a former salt marsh
reclaimed from the sea, which contains a deep sequence of post-glacial alluvial
deposits known as the Wentlooge Formation. The excavation of the site consisted of
a twenty trench evaluation, targeted excavation of the densest concentration of
archaeological features, and an investigation of the underlying alluvial sequence.
The investigation of the Wentlooge Sequence identified a northeast to southwest
aligned ridge in the Mudstone bedrock underlying Plot 5000, the surface of which
drops sharply to the southeast. The deposits in the depression formed by the
Mudstone evidence outer estuarine influence and episodes of peat formation, and
may have formed in a backwater channel or lagoon that was occasionally cut off
from the tide. While the upper part of the sequence in Plot 5000 appears to similar to
that which has already been investigated in Plot 4000, the lower part provides a new
sequence through the Lower Wentlooge Formation which has not been recorded to a
comparable depth within the Distribution Park. These lower deposits record a
sequence of earlier Holocene hydrological and sedimentary change which extends
beyond the depths reached in Plot 4000.
Plot 5000 lies close to Plot 4000 where Romano-British settlement has been identified
by Wessex Archaeology. The excavations in Plot 5000 uncovered a series of
interconnecting coaxial enclosures and droveways dating to the mid-late Roman
period (2nd to 4th century AD), probably forming part of a permanent settlement.
Several phases of enclosure suggest that this was part of a managed landscape that
saw frequent periods of reorganisation, perhaps in response to environmental and
sedimentary change. No clear structural evidence was identified in Plot 5000, and it
seems likely that the remains in this area were related to the settlement identified in
Plot 4000.
Environmental and sedimentary evidence from the Roman ditches indicates brackish
conditions within an open landscape. The environmental indicators suggest a
gradual transition from a high salt marsh to a slightly drier and more open
environment on an alluvial island within the Levels. The Roman drainage of the site
would appear to have been successful, but the area may still have been prone to
flooding. The presence of domestic refuse, including crop processing waste and
pottery, indicate that the site was predominantly dry, and more than just a seasonal
pastoral settlement.
xi
The archaeology recorded at the site adds to the growing body of evidence for
Romano-British rural settlement on the Avonmouth Levels. Although the evidence
from Plot 5000 provides no conclusive evidence for systematic reclamation in this
part of the Levels, the appearance of permanent settlements on the Levels
demonstrates that drainage and settlement did occur in the later Roman period. Such
settlement could, however, have been opportunistic, and was probably dependent
upon local hydrological conditions. It may also have been assisted by a slow down in
the rate of sea-level rise during this period. The changes evidenced in Plot 5000
formed part of a process of modification and transformation of the Levels that was
played out in many regions of the Severn Estuary.

Item Type: Client Report
Subjects: Geographical Areas > English Counties > Gloucestershire
Period > UK Periods > Medieval 1066 - 1540 AD
Period > UK Periods > Roman 43 - 410 AD
Divisions: Oxford Archaeology South > Fieldwork
Depositing User: Scott
Date Deposited: 20 Jan 2022 16:51
Last Modified: 24 Feb 2022 17:01
URI: http://eprints.oxfordarchaeology.com/id/eprint/6189

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