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Editorial

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2021

Robert Witcher*
Affiliation:
Durham, 1 October 2021
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Abstract

Information

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Antiquity Publications Ltd.
Figure 0

Figure 1. Global temperature change, 1850–2020 (https://showyourstripes.info. Ed Hawkins, CC BY 4.0).

Figure 1

Figure 2. A view of traffic on the A303 road, looking west from the Bronze Age round barrow cemetery on King Barrow ridge, August 2021. Stonehenge lies approximately 200m to the right side of the road (photograph by R. Witcher).

Figure 2

Frontispiece 1. Aerial photograph of the excavation in July 2021 of an early medieval burial site within a penannular ditch on Ex Ring Giver on Salisbury Plain, UK. Investigations recovered 21 burials with associated grave goods, probably dating to the seventh century AD. The site is located on land owned by the Ministry of Defence, part of the largest military training area in the UK. The project is organised by Operation Nightingale, an initiative to support the recovery of military personnel and veterans through involvement in archaeological investigations. The Ex Ring Giver excavation is a collaboration between the veteran support organisation, Breaking Ground Heritage, the UK Government's Defence Infrastructure Organisation and a commercial archaeology unit, Wessex Archaeology (photograph: WO1 Morris; © Crown).

Figure 3

Frontispiece 2. A 3D-photogrammetric model of the Hohle Fels cave complex, near Ulm, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The cave is one of six that form the ‘Caves and Ice Age Art in the Swabian Jura’ UNESCO World Heritage Site. The group was inscribed in 2017 in recognition of some of the world's earliest evidence of human artistic development, dating to the Aurignacian (c. 43 000–33 000 years ago). The complete model of the Hohle Fels cave complex uses around 8600 digital photographs; the excerpt here shows the area of the University of Tübingen excavations, which have recovered musical instruments and mammoth ivory figurines. The QR code gives access to the 3D model in Sketchfab (© Landesamt für Denkmalpflege im Regierungspräsidium Stuttgart; model: C. Steffen & M. Steffen).