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P.S. Laura Bullivant, the EH Community Education and Outreach Officer for Groundwell, asked me to show a group of 14-16 year olds around the site, I decided not to show them the uppy-downy game
From the EH website…Week 6 Day 1
We have removed most of the capping stones from our early drain and it is clear that it is stone-lined, very narrow and fully silted-up.
In Room 1 we are removing the soil that we left against the walls to protect the plaster that we know to survive on walls of the cellar. Whilst doing this we received not one, but two surprises. There are two layers of plaster on the west wall and there is an infilled opening in the western wall and possibly one in the south wall –are they doors, windows or niches? – given that we have only four days digging left we may well not find out. However as with the rest of the site they will be safe for future researchers.
We are again carefully excavating and planning the area of Room 2 – the remains are so complex that we need to ensure that the drawings and site records are adequate to the task of reconstructing them on paper and the computer screen back in the office.
It is clear that we are dealing with a bath-suite – a bathing range within a larger building. In the cold range we have removed some of the fill from both the inlet and outlet water channels – the northern one a stone-lined channel, the southern one a gap in the wall of Room 3 which presumably links with either the early stone-lined drain or later ditch. Both channels may have originally contained lead pipes, which like leadwork on many Roman sites would have been removed for reuse.
Designed by Corinne Mills 2005
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