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Archaeologist happens upon Roman bone fragments – at the end of his road | Archaeologist happens upon Roman bone fragments – at the end of his road |
(about 9 hours later) | |
Mike Heyworth, president of the Council for British Archaeology, was trudging home after a long, hot day in the office when he was startled to find fragments of Roman bone and pottery lying on a heap of soil at the end of his road. | |
The trench dug by a utilities company in York, which had sliced through an ancient cemetery, was on the corner of a residential street near the city's racecourse. | The trench dug by a utilities company in York, which had sliced through an ancient cemetery, was on the corner of a residential street near the city's racecourse. |
But it was also just across the road from a site that made headlines worldwide:, a pit under suburban back gardens where more than 80 skeletons of young gladiators – including one with bite marks from a lion, and decapitated skulls with the marks of hammer blows – were excavated. | |
The fragments of leg bone, and a jaw with teeth, that Heyworth happened upon may be a less sensational discovery. But he was astonished that nobody in the local authority had realised the sensitivity of the site – particularly in an area where Roman remains are often found close to the surface. | The fragments of leg bone, and a jaw with teeth, that Heyworth happened upon may be a less sensational discovery. But he was astonished that nobody in the local authority had realised the sensitivity of the site – particularly in an area where Roman remains are often found close to the surface. |
"Permission had been obtained from the council by the utility company to excavate the trench but apparently no condition was made to have an archaeologist present on site. When a known archaeological site is disturbed by any sort of development, it is vital that archaeologists can monitor the work and make a record of anything that is found," he said. | "Permission had been obtained from the council by the utility company to excavate the trench but apparently no condition was made to have an archaeologist present on site. When a known archaeological site is disturbed by any sort of development, it is vital that archaeologists can monitor the work and make a record of anything that is found," he said. |
Heyworth says the incident shows up the "black holes" that are appearing in local authority archaeology services, with planners taking decisions without any specialist advice. | Heyworth says the incident shows up the "black holes" that are appearing in local authority archaeology services, with planners taking decisions without any specialist advice. |
He notified both the police to inform them that human remains had been discovered and the local authority, and work has now been suspended while an archaeologist investigates the site. |