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CONTENTS issue 275

(Vol XXIII, No.11) | February 2013

UP FRONT

Letters

Your comments, complaints, and compliments

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News

Staffordshire Hoard field: new Saxon finds; Artificial isles of wonder; Roman outreach; An Iron Age Canterbury tale; Longer in the tooth; Star Carr’s star finds; Monumental changes at Stonehenge;

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I s s u e

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February 2013

February 2013

Issue 275 | £4.25

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O r k n e y S p e c i a l:

N o l t l a n d | T h e

C a i r n s |

N o r t h S e a | R o u s a y

ORKNEY SPECIALORKNEYSPECIALORKNEY SPECIAL

Discovering the secret shrines in a Neolithic home

Discovering the secret shrines in a Neolithic home

Orkney’s Venus c u r r e nt a r c h a e ol o g y

North Sea odyssey

How seafaring changed the tides of history

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Staffordshire Hoard latest Stunning Saxon finds from the same field

Issue 275

19/12/2012 12:19

ON THE COVER Rock chick: known as the Orkney Venus or Westray Wife, this figurine is one of the most celebrated finds from the Links of Noltland.

CREDIT

CREDIT: Historic Scotland

FEATURES SANDS OF TIME

Domestic ritual at the Links of Noltland Contemporary with the Ness of Brodgar’s ritual monuments, what can this settlement tell us about everyday life in prehistoric Orkney?

THE CAIRNS

From broch builders to Viking traders A riot of Iron Age archaeological remains are proving more important than the site’s antiquarian discoverer could have dreamed – as well as shedding light on Scandinavian incomers.

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CONNECTED BY THE SEA

The early history of seafaring Balancing the often land-based focus of our island story, we explore tales of heroism and prehistoric travellers in foreign lands.

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ROUSAY

Racing against sea and tide Coastal erosion has revealed a wealth of archaeological material from brochs to burnt mounds. What can rescue excavations reveal about the island’s prehistoric population?

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REGULARS

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Conference

Further details of Current Archaeology Live! 2013

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Reviews

Monuments of Orkney – avisitor’s guide;Archaeology:a very short introduction;Flint and Stone in the Neolithic Period;The Antiquarian Rediscovery of the Antonine Wall

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Sherds

Chris Catling’s irreverent take on heritage issues

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Last Word

Andrew Selkirk talks about archaeological funding and the private purse

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Odd Socs

The Computer Conservation Society

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current archaeology | www.archaeology.co.uk

February 2013 |