Blog entries in 2020
We encourage everyone involved in the CITiZAN project to contribute to our blog. Whether you're on site monitoring, in a library researching, or conducting oral history projects, we want to hear from you! To submit an article please email your regional CITiZAN Community Archaeologist with your text and up to five images.
- Before the coming of the railways if you wanted to quickly and easily move large amounts of cargo you needed sail power. Whether that was shipping goods inland from an international port or moving products to a seaport for overseas sale. On the Mersey that sail power was provided my a Mersey Flat, a barge which evolved to deal with the specific conditions of working on the river.
- In celebration of International Museum Day, we look back at our collaborations with Mersea Museum over the last few years and announce a brand new project for volunteers!
- Britain at Low Tide (BaLT) regularly reached audiences of over a million people, demonstrating that foreshore archaeology and the stories it reveals about our island history are fascinating to the British public. Six months since the last episode aired (and the public was left high and dry for its intertidal archaeology fix), we are getting back in touch with the team to revisit some highlights.
- For VE Day, archaeologist and historian Stephen Fisher looks at the fate of some of the Second World War’s most interesting intertidal features – the landing craft embarkation hards built in advance of D-Day. © Stephen Fisher/ CITiZAN
- Mapping the world; Educating Darwin; Guarding Essex
Work horse of the Mersey
20/05/2020 | Andy Sherman
A Timeline to Pass the Time
18/05/2020 | Danielle Newman
Britain at Low Tide revisited
14/05/2020 | Oliver Hutchinson
Hard Ending: The Post-War Fate of Britain’s D-Day Embarkation Hards
06/05/2020 | Stephen Fisher
HMS Beagle 200th Anniversary
05/05/2020 | Gustav Milne