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Cover of British Archaeology 121

Issue 121

Nov / Dec 2011

Contents

making tracks

John Varmint revisits Burdell Mansion

news

All the latest archaeology news from around the country

letters

Your views and responses

Mick's Travels

Mick Aston explores the aristocratic remains in Essex

CBA Correspondent

Mike Heyworth says changes are needed the Treasure Act

spoilheap

Digging for the BBC

features

Premiere at Wadi Faynan

Amazing archaeology being uncovered in Jordan

The weir and the flowing earthworks of Bedford

Medieval features hidden in the modern waterways

THE BIG DIG/COVER STORY: Bouldnor Cliff

A lost world of the mesolithic hidden in the Solent

The Living Stones of Brittany

A new look at the origins of these enigmatic megaliths

Onsite and Online at Craig Phadrig

The importance of the historic environment records, in northern Scotland

Archaeology at the Festival of Britain

Building the South Bank exhibition hall for the 1951 event

 

ISSN 1357-4442

Editor Mike Pitts

Issue 121, November/December 2011

contents

making tracks

John Varmint revisits the archaeological study of Burdell Mansion

news

All the latest archaeology news from around the country

letters

Your views and responses

Mick's Travels

Mick Aston explores the aristocratic remains in Essex

CBA Correspondent

Mike Heyworth says changes are needed to the Treasure Act

spoilheap

Digging for the BBC

features

Premiere at Wadi Faynan

Amazing archaeology being uncovered in Jordan

The weir and the flowing earthworks of Bedford

Medieval features hidden in the modern waterways

THE BIG DIG/COVER STORY: Bouldnor Cliff

A lost world of the mesolithic hidden in the Solent

The Living Stones of Brittany

A new look at the origins of these enigmatic megaliths

Onsite and Online at Craig Phadrig

The importance of the historic environment records, in northern Scotland

Archaeology at the Festival of Britain

Building the South Bank exhibition hall for the 1951 event

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Our distant ancestors who lived in caves, experimented with the sounds of stones and pebbles, shells and sticks and gourds and bones, and heard the music of the winds and waves.
Poet Wendy Cope, in her new commentary to Britten's Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, reminded the audience at the Last Night of the Proms on 11 September that music has a long ancestory

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