CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND—Excavations at the site of a new residential development just north of Cambridge have revealed traces of a Roman settlement, Cambridge Independent reports. Situated at the intersection of a Roman canal and road, the 17-acre area features an elaborate 2,000-year-old ditch system dating to the late Iron Age or early Roman period. Archaeologists have also unearthed pottery kilns and ceramic fragments that indicate Roman industrial production, as well as coins and a Bronze Age palstave ax head. To read about 6,000 years of history uncovered during construction on Cambridgeshire's A14 roadway, go to "Letter from England: Building a Road Through History."
Roman Settlement Found in Cambridgeshire
News July 28, 2020
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2023
Early Medieval Elegance
Artifacts January/February 2022
Roman Key Handle
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2021
Identifying the Unidentified
Digs & Discoveries September/October 2021
Leisure Seekers
-
Features May/June 2020
A Path to Freedom
At a Union Army camp in Kentucky, enslaved men, women, and children struggled for their lives and fought to be free
(National Archives Records Administration, Washington, DC) -
Features May/June 2020
Villages in the Sky
High in the Rockies, archaeologists have discovered evidence of mountain life 4,000 years ago
(Matt Stirn) -
Letter from Morocco May/June 2020
Splendor at the Edge of the Sahara
Excavations of a bustling medieval city tell the tale of a powerful Berber dynasty
(Photo Courtesy Chloé Capel) -
Artifacts May/June 2020
Torah Shield and Pointer
(Courtesy Michał Wojenka/Jagiellonian University Institute of Archaeology)