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Evidence Of Millennia-Old Textile Manufacture And Rare Ancient Eagle-Bone Pin Discovered In Oxfordshire

Evidence Of Millennia-Old Textile Manufacture And Rare Ancient Eagle-Bone Pin Discovered In Oxfordshire

Jan Bartek - AncientPages.com - Archaeologists excavating at the site of the A40 Science Transit park & ride at Eynsham, Oxfordshire, UK, have made some interesting discoveries.

During excavations, the Cotswold Archaeology research team unearthed a Middle Iron Age settlement and an important Early Bronze Age cremation burial of a child containing an eagle-bone pin. At the site, scientists also found evidence of millennia-old textile manufacture.

The Early Bronze Age cremation burial had been placed, unurned, in a shallow pit alongside charcoal from the pyre.

The Golden Eagle phalanx. Credit: Cotswold Archaeology

"Upon analysis, Sharon Clough (CA Osteoarchaeologist) and Matty Holmes (Consultant Zooarchaeologist) found a fragment of cremated worked animal bone amongst the child’s remains. This has subsequently been identified as a pin, and it’s understood this would have been included as a pyre good. The pin had been shaped from the phalanx (toe bone) of a Golden Eagle, making it the only example found in a funerary context in England. A hole in one end suggests it may have been worn suspended, perhaps using a fibre cord.

Most settlement activity at the site appears to have occurred during the Middle Iron Age. Evidence was found for roundhouse buildings, post-built structures, and probable livestock enclosures. Posthole groups across the site potentially indicate the presence of other buildings, and enclosures or fence lines separating distinct areas or zones.

The roundhouses were defined by shallow ring ditches that represent drainage features enclosing a central building, and several pits and postholes were discovered within the interiors of two of these roundhouses, which would have held structural elements, such as posts for roof support," scientists inform in a press statement.

Plan of the Iron Age features on site. Credit: Cotswold Archaeology

Together with a moderate quantity of Iron Age pottery, the site produced a small assemblage of fired clay. Particularly interesting are one near-complete triangular object and fragments of a second, likely of similar form, which were recovered from the postholes associated with two of the roundhouses. These objects are loom weights for use on a vertical weighted loom, and therefore they may suggest that textile manufacture was undertaken, maybe even within the roundhouses themselves.

One of the loom weight fragments. Credit: Cotswold Archaeology

The archaeology identified during this excavation provides an insight into the organization and use of a small, local Iron Age farmstead, which potentially focused on textile production. The identification of the Bronze Age cremation burial with its Golden Eagle pin is, not just in its rarity, extremely exciting.

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The choice of eagle bone is likely to have been significant, and it is possible such an object could have been considered talismanic or was linked perhaps with afterlife beliefs, raising further questions about its use as a pyre good for a child.

The archaeological finds will be preserved for posterity with the Oxfordshire Museums Service.

Written by Jan Bartek - AncientPages.com Staff Writer

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