Understanding the National Park

Seathwaite Tarn excavation

Fellwalking in the Lake District National Park

2007 update: Seathwaite Tarn Ring Cairn Excavation

R2R Ring cairns to reservoirs logo

We've teamed up with the Duddon Valley Local History Group to continue and complete the excavation of a Bronze Age ring cairn at Seathwaite Tarn. The excavation forms part of the Ring Cairns to Reservoirs Project.

Dig Diary Week 1

Despite the very unseasonal wet weather, the excavation is off to a flying start. John Hodgson, the LDNPA Senior Archaeologist, leads the excavation, assisted by Alastair Vannan from Oxford Archaeology North. The excavation team includes five students from Durham University but the majority of volunteers are members of the Duddon Valley Local History Group.

So far we have established our excavation base and begun to take the turf off the large ring cairn. We have also established a site grid to help record what is uncovered.

Seathwaite Ring cairn with large one being de-turfed

Photo: Small ring cairn in foreground and large one being de-turfed

Dig Diary Week 2

Luckily the weather has improved and we have had some dry days this week. We have now removed all of the turf and topsoil from two quadrants of the main ring cairn and have started planning the archaeological features that have been revealed.

R2R Main cairn in week 2

Photo: main cairn

We have also started to remove the turf from the small ring cairn to the west of the large cairn and we are hoping to find out if they were built and used at the same time.

R2R Small cairn week 2

Photo: small cairn

Another part of the project involves investigation of the vegetation on the site during the Bronze Age. We are taking cores from boggy areas near the site to examine the pollen that may survive. This will help us to understand the past environment at Seathwaite Tarn.

R2R coring week 2

R2R coring week 2 - taking sample

Photos: taking core samples

National Archaeology Week Family Open Days

Saturday 14 and Tuesday 24 July at 10am at Seathwaite Parish Hall near Ulpha, Duddon Valley

Enjoy learning about the archaeology of the Duddon Valley, including a visit to an archaelogical excavation. Learn about techniques used in surveys and exhibitions and join in activities for all the family.

Exhibition - Ring Cairns to Reservoirs: Investigating the Archaeology of the Duddon Valley

Saturday 14 and Sunday 22 July at 1pm, at Seathwaite Parish Hall near Ulpha, Duddon Valley

Archaeological Sites around Seathwaite Tarn

Thursday 19 July at 10am starting from Seathwaite Parish Hall near Ulpha, Duddon Valley

A guided walk to learn about the perhistoric, medieval and industrial sites around Seathwaite Tarn, and visit the excavation of a Bronze Age ring cairn.

Events are free but booking is essential as places are limited. Please call 015394 46601

Heritage Lottery Fund logo

2003 update:

In 2003 survey work by Peter Rogers, a former Area Manager with the LDNPA, identified an formerly unrecognised group of circular stone-built monuments in the Lake District fells. The locations of about 30 of these sites have been recorded and added to the Sites and Monuments Record, but nothing was known of their date or function. It was thought that they might be medieval shielings, which are fell pasture settlements used in the summer, or prehistoric ring cairns.

A small sample excavation was carried out in May and June 2003 on an example of this group located close to Seathwaite Tarn in the Duddon valley. A sherd of pottery found during the excavation dates the site from the early to mid Bronze Age. The monument is thought to have been used for ritual purposes, possibly including burial. This information is extremely important, as known prehistoric activity in the high fells was previously limited chiefly to the Neolithic stone axe quarries in Langdale. We now know that there is a significant distribution of Bronze Age monuments in the fells and it is highly likely that many more remain to be discovered.

Although the excavation was successful in confirming the significance of these sites, more work remains to be done and we are investigating ways of carrying out a further season of excavation.