Next generation of archaeologists to train on dig

The project hopes to "retell the prehistory and history of a prominent site in the landscape", said archaeologist Dr Oscar Aldred
- Published
Archaeologists are to begin a five-year project to excavate the site of a nationally important Iron Age hillfort and analyse their finds.
The first dig will take place on the protected ancient monument at Wandlebury Country Park, external, just south of Cambridge, from 28 April to 9 May.
Students and staff from Cambridge University's archaeology department and the Cambridge Archaeological Unit will be taking part.
Dr Oscar Aldred, from the unit, said it was "a really exciting opportunity to train the next generation of archaeologists".

It will also offer a long-term training project for the next generation of the university's archaeologists
An excavation by the Cambridge team at Wandlebury last year uncovered a later Bronze Age ditch, dating to between 1500 to 800BC, which was reused to support a wooden palisade during the Iron Age.
The five-year project hopes to reveal more about the history and prehistory of the hillfort, which is protected as a scheduled monument, external.
Trenches and test pits will be dug into the ground, following last year's geophysical surveys - techniques that use the properties of the soil to map archaeology below the ground.
Dr Aldred said: "Our particular focus this year is to prepare the ground to answer important archaeological questions by assessing the inside of the hillfort, how well-preserved it is, as well as begin to gain a better understanding of the possible hillfort entrance."

The last time archaeologists were working at Wandlebury, visitors loved finding out more about their finds, said its estate manager Allan Scott-Davies
Visitors to the country park, which is owned by the charity Cambridge Past, Present & Future, will be able to speak to the archaeologists as they work.
Wandlebury's estate manager, Allan Scott-Davies, said: "We run a popular Iron Age outdoor education programme for schools, so it would be great to share that knowledge with the children when they visit."
A public archaeology open day will be held on 3 May.

The site is home to an Iron Age hillfort, as well as an 18th Century country estate, with a walled garden, orchard and ponds
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