Neolithic House1 at Butser Ancient Farm based on archaeological evidence from Durrington Walls (Wiltshire, England). (Freeman, 2014). |
It is often thought that the main focus of the work at
Butser Ancient Farm is to focus on the construction of ancient buildings.
However we are also interested in the life of the buildings we construct and
their final failure and collapse. As a site of experimental archaeological
research we learn just as much from watching buildings collapse as we do
constructing them in the first place. In some cases we even find it necessary to take down a building before it collapses
and during this ‘accelerated collapse’ we are able to look into many aspects of the remains archaeologists may find in the ground.
This ‘accelerated collapse’ process was deemed necessary
early this month with the first Neolithic house constructed at the farm. Due to
many different factors, different elements of the house were starting to fail
and, with high winds forecast the decision was made that the house needed to be
dismantled for health and safety reasons.
You can see the split in the 'Y' fork holding up the main cross beam of the roof! (Watts, 2015). |
You can see how loose some of the bindings in the building were. This raw hide lashing was of little structural use at this point in time (Scanlan, 2015). |
The destruction of the house took just a day. During the
whole process detailed records were being taken, from the state of the bindings
used to hold the building together to the spread of the daub (wall covering)
on the floor. The process was carried out in a way that would replicate what
might happen to the building if left to decay of its own accord. This meant
small detailed destruction rather than smashing it down with a sledge hammer or
two!
Videos of the 'accelerated collapse' of Neolithic1. This was my first attempt at time lapse photography of a project so apologise for the roughness of the video but I have learnt so much from just this video the next ones are bound to be better! Working on the process are myself Ryan Watts, Will Scanlan, Phoebe Harris and Work Experience Jackie.
The findings of the process are still being analysed and
will be published once they have been completed but initial observations are
very exciting especially concerning the spread of the wall material on both
sides of the walls.
The spread of chalk based daub on the outside of the building (Watts, 2015). |
The house that was dismantled was based on evidence from
Durrington Walls (Wiltshire, England) which have also been recently reconstructed
at the new Stonehenge visitor centre. These reconstructions have been built with
walls fully covered with chalk based daubed because of a small chalk spread excavated
on the outside of one of the original buildings.
The preliminary results of the ‘accelerated collapse’ of our
construction demonstrates that if the entire wall was covered in a chalk based
daub then the spread of material discovered would be seen on both the inside
and outside of the building and not just on the outside as the Durrington Walls
archaeology shows.
Although only a preliminary and a small scale experiment
this ‘accelerated collapse’ of our Neolithic House1 demonstrates the need for
further investigation into the spread of walling material in the archaeological
record. This would enable us to better understand the building process of
ancient people and develop our methods of reconstructing ancient buildings
The footprint that is left after the 'accelerated collapse' of Neolithic House 1 at Butser Ancient Farm (Watts, 2015). |
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