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The
Archaeology of the A27 Brighton Bypass

Between 1989 and 1991 a programme of archaeological rescue excavations
was undertaken by the University College London Field Archaeology
Unit on the route of the new A27 Brighton Bypass, East Sussex.
The archaeological works were designed within a research framework
to investigate chalk downland settlement and land-use, from the
Mesolithic to the present day. A particular aim of the project
was to integrate settlement archaeology into a paleoenvironmental
study, and the various excavations included a large number of
lynchet sections and a total of seven dry valley bottom transects.
In addition to investigating an area, which had previously yielded
an important assemblage of Mesolithic and later flintwork (Redhill),
and a nationally important block of prehistoric fields (Eastwick
Barn), the Brighton Bypass Archaeology Project located and recorded
two important and previously unknown Later Bronze Age settlements
(Mile Oak and Downsview). The evidence for two of the buildings
at the Downsview site was later used for experimental work and
the results and conclusions of these investigations are included
in the excavation report. Also included in this volume, due to
both their relevance and proximity to the Bypass, are summary
reports of two other excavated Later Bronze Age settlements: Varley
Halls and Patcham Fawcett.
This volume builds on, consolidates and brings to a more synthetic
framework a long history of archaeological work, professional
and amateur, in the Brighton area. As an integrated study of settlements,
field systems and colluvial sequences it provides a significant
advance in our understanding of the prehistory of the South Downs,
and has much wider implications for areas beyond Sussex. In particular,
the extent of Later Bronze Age activity is very important with
regard to our understanding of landscape and social change during
this period. The Project’s extensive investigation of lynchets
and colluvium also helps us to develop our understanding of the
character and date of ‘Celtic fields’, which were the subject
of pioneer fieldwork by earlier archaeologists in the Brighton
area.
Published by: Archetype Publications
ISBN: 1873132530
£35.00
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