π± TheΒ FAIR Fenland Deposit-modelling DatasetΒ will be led by Dr Phil Stastney. The dataset will support 3D modelling of past landscapes, including an open-access database of over 15,000 trenches, test pits and boreholes.
π± TheΒ FAIR Fenland Deposit-modelling DatasetΒ will be led by Dr Phil Stastney. The dataset will support 3D modelling of past landscapes, including an open-access database of over 15,000 trenches, test pits and boreholes.
π± The Online Atlas of Past Animals and Plants in the FensΒ will be led by Dr Rachel Ballantyne, in collaboration with Poppy Szaybo from @clr-cambridge.bsky.social. The atlas will draw upon a new database of over 1.2 million ancient plant and animal remains.
We are delighted to share that the @fenscapes.bsky.social Project have been awarded two grants from the first round of the @hsds-update.bsky.social Small Grants Programme. The two newly-funded projects will create innovative online resources.
π Find out more: www.arch.cam.ac.uk/news/fenscap...
π§΅
Excited to announce HSDS are supporting TWO brand new datasets from the Fens!π
1οΈβ£Digital atlas of ancient plants and animals using our huge Fens enviro database
2οΈβ£Open sediment sequence dataset to help build reusable geoarchaeological deposit models
Watch this space!
π@hsds-update.bsky.social
NEW Archaeologists often claim they can contribute to modern 'global challenges' such as climate change, but rarely get a space at the policymaking table
The latest #AntiquityDebate proposes an approach to ensure archaeology's relevance and impact πΊ #Archaeology 1/2
π doi.org/10.15184/aqy...
Screenshot from Thimlich Ohinga Archaeological Site, displaying metadata elements.
Screenshot from Thimlich Ohinga Archaeological Site, displaying βCopyright & Accessβ group metadata elements.
Screenshot from the βAccessing Responsiblyβ article from 9th Issue
Accessibility and reuse underpin FAIR, but applying them varies across contexts. We clean, validate, and structure data with clear metadata and rights frameworks. Public data is shared under Creative Commons, with limits where needed.
maeasam.org/accessing-re... #Digitalheritage #Datapolicy #Fair
Hear Fenscapers Rachel, Phil and Neal taking about our work & 5,000 years' worth of environmental archaeology in the Fens!
Great to be invited by Fens East Peat Partnership to give a webinar last month - now on YouTube, along with many other great talks
@lincswildlife.bsky.social
shorturl.at/x3alQ
Happy #WorldWetlandsDay!
Traditional knowledge has long guided the sustainable use of wetlands. As the Convention on Wetlands marks 55 years, #WorldWetlandsDay2026 calls on us to protect wetlands and honour cultural heritage.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_Mc...
Aerial image of a green landscape near a village with areas of wetland
This is a pioneering new wetland restoration project on the Oxfordshire-Wiltshire border at Coleshill. It was designed to bring clean-water habitats back to the River Cole floodplain and create a much-needed wildlife corridor where 90% of freshwater habitats have been lost over the last century.
For our first Wilder Lincolnshire podcast of 2026, the team headed north to Crowle Moor to catch up with two of the Fens East Peat Partnership project officers and discuss the benefits and potential problems of using drones in conservation.
Listen now at www.lincstrust.org.uk/wilder-linco...
Wetlands often preserve organic archaeological remains, but they are under threat from climate change #WorldWetlandsDay
New research in the Fens of eastern England shows the need for integrated heritage and environmental management.
π doi.org/10.15184/aqy...
πΊ #Archaeology
A metal peat sampler laying on grass. The sampler contains a core of wood peat - the base of the core, to the left, is pale grey sandy clay which is overlain by dark brown peat containing pale yellow wood fragments
A view of the artificially-straightened River Nene, looking downstream. The river channel runs from the foreground through the centre of the picture into the flat horizon. Either side of the river are fields - pasture to the right, and arable fields to the left. Also to the left of the riverbank are two yellow dredging machines.
Two people pushing an auger into the ground at Wicken Fen. In the foreground is an orange bag containing coring equipment. Beneath a blue sky with fluffy white clouds, a mowed droveway stretches off towards the horizon, flanked on either sides by reeds.
View across part of Dersingham Bog. In the foreground are dark pools of water, surrounded by mosses and heather. The tussocky bog stretches away from the viewer towards a line of pine and birch trees that surround the bog.
Happy World Wetlands Day! π ποΈπ§π±
Did you know about the variety of wetlands that exist around the East Anglian Fens?
These incredible habitats preserve evidence of past environmental change & human activity over thousands of years, as well as being vital for biodiversity, water & carbon management
First food alert of the winter for the Ouse Washes
check-for-flooding.service.gov.uk/target-area/...
Last chance to see? Thought provoking piece about the future of peatland archaeology
Open access and well worth a read!
Archaeological section showing Holocene stratigraphy with preserved tree stump
Submerged forest #FlagFenBasin #Fenland
Curved Romanesque arches, the ruined remains of 12th century parts of Crowland Abbey
Interior of the tower
Piscina, inside the existing church
The blue and red coat of arms of Crowland Abbey and an image of St Guthlac
View of the ruins of Crowland Abbey, with the church beyond
Paid an impromptu visit to Crowland Abbey this afternoon. One of the most important medieval religious centres in the Ferns. Looking very picturesque in the autumn afternoon sun today π
Dr Neal Payne standing by his conference poster
Day 2 at 50 Years of Discovery in Norwich. Dr Neal Payne presenting a first glimpse of our huge new environmental archaeological database, that illustrates the history of farming and ecology in the Fens stretching back thousands of years! πΎππ
... and of course #mustfarm another illustration of the far-reaching impact of the archaeology of the #flagfenbasin
Prof Carenza Lewis giving a conference presentation
First talk at the 50 Years of Discovery conference in Norwich, and the Fens already get an honourable mention in Prof Carenza Lewis's top 20 sites in East Anglia! #flagfen #fenland
Beautiful!
Two more weeks till Dublin!! Can't wait for this!
First project output published! π Fully open access
Read more about our project and initial results here!
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
The team augering
Wicken Lode
π£ PUBLISHED OPEN ACCESS π£
Fenscapes: archaeology, natural heritage and environmental change in the Fens of eastern England in @antiquity.ac.uk
π www.arch.cam.ac.uk/news/fenscap...
πΈ Fenscapes Team
@cambridgearch.bsky.social @cam.ac.uk
This is Radio 4 at its best - an immersive "documentary" about Lindow Man, Lindow Woman, their society, discovery and their ongoing relevance. Well worth a listen even if bog bodies aren't your thing! www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/...
The project team are heading down en-masse for @AEA_Oxford24 later this week. Looking forward a couple of days of exciting talks, meeting old friends and presenting our first results from the #Fens! See you there!