The first one is Season 17, Episode 11; titled “There a Villa Here Somewhere,” and it aired in 2011. Second one is Season 14, Episode 01, “Finds on the Fairway,” airing in 2008. Third is Season 18, Episode 06, “Under the Gravestones,” which aired in 2012.
I'm a Texan living in Ohio. Fairway intrigued me to open gmaps. Speke Keeill. The course has guest accomodations for 110+ USD a night. I may look for the actual dig site on a topo map but for now back to the show.
Great post! 😊❤ Philip - I always slice those little Brussels sprouts in half when stir-frying. The flavour penetrates right through and they cook more quickly. No more blah tasting interior. 😊
It always amazes me how deep things can be buried simply by the growth of vegetation overtime. The pavement in the copse was just below the surface yet elsewhere on site things were almost a metre down 😮
2 ponies at my friend's house give rise (ha) to a much heap of about 7 tons, causing lean to a large tree that had to be felled. Meanwhile a hay rack fastened to another tree about 5ft high about 40 years ago, is now about 8ft high. I think trees form those buttresses by pushing themselves up out of the ground... But stuff collects round the base and unless someone clears it, everything gets higher
Having those two experienced archaeologists in that bush section. Sometime exciting happening there. And the dog chewing on a bone ???? British humour at its finest
I think we should cut them some slack. There were some that were really very looty, yes. But, on the other hand, some of them paved the way for modern archaeology.
If you note also the reverance that moderns have for old bones is recent. Charnel pits and charnel houses were used to deposit bones from old graves (I read once that over 10yrs old) which were emptied to make room for new burials.
What happens to the bones that are excavated? I would hope that after they have been examined, carbon dated, etc. they are properly reburied in consecrated ground. There is no point in storing them indefinitely.
Another great episode ancient ledge dwellings in Britain were accessed by hemp rope ladders they think take care you put ten years on my life 👍🏽🏴
Also completely correct, we are losing access to VAST amounts of digital knowledge, be it through servers going down, web crawlers not crawling old sites as they become outdated, paywalls and a million other reasons.
He's utterly outrageous, it was almost raucous! but he's very correct. I'm a programmer and I know that file formats for storing data are becoming increasingly complex and are in many cases (especially for scientific equipment) proprietary. There are already examples of lost file and media encoding formats and if anything is going to fall first? it's something like data from an MRI machine or ground penetrating radar where somebody kept a lid on the raw data to protect their IP.
@@JohnnyWednesday I know - I recently found some Cartridges from my Art-School days in the mid 90ies, now find a drive for it and the software just to find out that the data is fried :)
Hi pete , I know you from jack crafty flintknapping , fancy seeing you here , what are the odds of that eh ! And only 10hrs before me . Gotta love the Internet
exactly that all that which is still in Place could tell a whole other story o do they have it right who knows I hope so but such limited information.@@annazaman9657
I wonder what they called that type of hat that Stuart is wearing at 1:04:51, and what (if any) purpose it may have had besides a rather amazing fashion statement...
Watching older episodes is a reminder of how archeologists worked before they had all the tools they have now. The skills they depended on are still important, though they can be overshadowed by the flashier tools. And let's not forget that the 20+ years of Time Team episodes have helped significantly in popularizing archeology and may have helped bring about the development of some of the tools that make archeology easier and more productive today.
The first one is Season 17, Episode 11; titled “There a Villa Here Somewhere,” and it aired in 2011. Second one is Season 14, Episode 01, “Finds on the Fairway,” airing in 2008. Third is Season 18, Episode 06, “Under the Gravestones,” which aired in 2012.
I really appreciate the grouping of our favorite fellows working in earnest.
Thank you!
I'm a Texan living in Ohio.
Fairway intrigued me to open gmaps. Speke Keeill. The course has guest accomodations for 110+ USD a night.
I may look for the actual dig site on a topo map but for now back to the show.
Great post! 😊❤ Philip - I always slice those little Brussels sprouts in half when stir-frying. The flavour penetrates right through and they cook more quickly. No more blah tasting interior. 😊
Along with that, I add a little honey to the Brussels sprouts as it adds just a tad of sweetness.
Guys rant on the shortcomings of modern data recording was most enlightening and entertaining
7:08 .. “Ooh! Ahhh!” Says Phil..
it’s gonna be a good’un!😂
It always amazes me how deep things can be buried simply by the growth of vegetation overtime. The pavement in the copse was just below the surface yet elsewhere on site things were almost a metre down 😮
2 ponies at my friend's house give rise (ha) to a much heap of about 7 tons, causing lean to a large tree that had to be felled. Meanwhile a hay rack fastened to another tree about 5ft high about 40 years ago, is now about 8ft high. I think trees form those buttresses by pushing themselves up out of the ground... But stuff collects round the base and unless someone clears it, everything gets higher
You should try digging in the U.S. you have to go farther down.
@@Sara-lm8zvwhere I’m at, you’ve got around 330’ before you hit anything more solid than mud and partially decomposed forest litter 😂
Thank you!
It's a really good program is this.
You're not wrong lad
Phils never seen anything like it in all his life!
Time Team popularised Archeology, so we'll.
Must watch programming.
I learned much and part satiated my hunger for history
🎁🎊🇮🇪❤️🍀🎉🎈
I think watching history is best when you can turn it off an on to learn more 😊
Thanks for posting
Love the classics.
01:05:10 - I did enjoy that bit where Tony hinted on his role as Baldrick.
Having those two experienced archaeologists in that bush section. Sometime exciting happening there. And the dog chewing on a bone ???? British humour at its finest
I really liked the Ogham script find. 😁
I think Dr. Phil is a cool dude. 😎
Antiquarians; The very definition of the road to hell is paid with good intentions 😂
paved*
I think we should cut them some slack. There were some that were really very looty, yes. But, on the other hand, some of them paved the way for modern archaeology.
I see those remains that were unearthed in the digs, I can't help but wonder who these people were.
If you note also the reverance that moderns have for old bones is recent. Charnel pits and charnel houses were used to deposit bones from old graves (I read once that over 10yrs old) which were emptied to make room for new burials.
They probably expected to rest in peace and not appear on channel four on a Sunday tea time hundreds of years later
@@terryyakamoto3488and naked too!😂😊
You done got me wanting to put a trench in my yard😂
Go a head and get your neighbors a talking 😂😂😂
Miss Phil in the new shows.
“Let the other children come see the dead Roman in the park.” wtf guy lol 😂
What an amazing resource
Thannk you!
Litlington - they dug in the wrong place, the cropmarks suggest the main buildings were a about 50-100m to the south
What happens to the bones that are excavated? I would hope that after they have been examined, carbon dated, etc. they are properly reburied in consecrated ground. There is no point in storing them indefinitely.
Phil takes them home for his dog
😂😂😂
Just wondering where are you going to find consecrated Roman grounds or Saxon???😮
They stated in the video that everything they take out has to go back in the ground.
Another great episode ancient ledge dwellings in Britain were accessed by hemp rope ladders they think take care you put ten years on my life 👍🏽🏴
Ah ... "antiquarians"! It was a respectable hobby for the rich and idle, or a way for vicars to stay busy.
Guy de la Bedojeres roast was brilliantly eloquent (and his Name sounds like a Villain in Ivanhoe, I can't help it)
Also completely correct, we are losing access to VAST amounts of digital knowledge, be it through servers going down, web crawlers not crawling old sites as they become outdated, paywalls and a million other reasons.
0@@untenableposition
He's utterly outrageous, it was almost raucous! but he's very correct. I'm a programmer and I know that file formats for storing data are becoming increasingly complex and are in many cases (especially for scientific equipment) proprietary. There are already examples of lost file and media encoding formats and if anything is going to fall first? it's something like data from an MRI machine or ground penetrating radar where somebody kept a lid on the raw data to protect their IP.
@@JohnnyWednesday I know - I recently found some Cartridges from my Art-School days in the mid 90ies, now find a drive for it and the software just to find out that the data is fried :)
Steward looks as if he totally belongs into that Time😅
THANKS EVER SO MUCH. GOODBYE,
If you used 1:50000 or 1:25000 maps, you can use grid coordinates.
How come they don't use lidsr?
Probably cost and availability 😊
I remember this but they did not put a hole where nothing was mentioned no telling what they would have found
What do you mean? They could only investigated what showed on the geophysics. It's a huge area. They couldn't have dug it all up
Hi pete , I know you from jack crafty flintknapping , fancy seeing you here , what are the odds of that eh ! And only 10hrs before me . Gotta love the Internet
exactly that all that which is still in Place could tell a whole other story o do they have it right who knows I hope so but such limited information.@@annazaman9657
Indian arrowheads and archeology brings me here or medieval@@captainflint89
I wonder what they called that type of hat that Stuart is wearing at 1:04:51, and what (if any) purpose it may have had besides a rather amazing fashion statement...
stovepipe tophat
It's a Top Hat. Worn by the rich and educated.
And it most likely was made of beaver skin, coming from USA and CANADA.
Oh? I didn't know that, thanks for pointing it out! I always assumed they're felted from Hare or similar...@@leecarlson9713
Wow, cool! Thank you all.
More antiquarian abuse? Bless them they tried
Isle of man so basically the locals converted to Christianity and carried on using the same graveyard they always had wow what a suprise
What a shame TIMETEAM didnt start today with the technology we have now they'd find way more things..
The new digs they made in the last couple of years have been great to watch for this exact reason! Especially the geo phys :)
Watching older episodes is a reminder of how archeologists worked before they had all the tools they have now. The skills they depended on are still important, though they can be overshadowed by the flashier tools. And let's not forget that the 20+ years of Time Team episodes have helped significantly in popularizing archeology and may have helped bring about the development of some of the tools that make archeology easier and more productive today.
Is Jacky a sister of Tony?! 😅
Dr Faye.... what a woman
No such place as "the British isles" ogham was Irish the site but god forbid it be given credit to the people who created it
I'm proud of my name king ALARIC of viking s
My name is ALARIC king of viking s thay My ansters My name wos a king
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I ment arial lidar.
A
B hello ea 😅 are s🎉 ppm zii
One thing for sure is people of science have big egos.
Unlike the rest of us. 😂
Roman experts that don't know what a Prator is...scary
Oi! It's Praetor.
Guy really is unpleasant at times.
Wrong. He is terrific.
He worships the Romans, a people who conquered and enslaved other peoples, forcing their culture onto them, enough said
If I join....I want to see more women's stories!!