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Episode 2 of the Time Team Podcast has dropped!

Thank you to everyone who has listened to Episode 1 of the brand new Time Team Podcast, presented by Helen Geake and Martyn Williams. We've had a great response and appreciate all your comments and questions!

You can now listen to Episode 2 RIGHT HERE.

In the second episode, Helen and Martyn speak to Francesca Giarelli from Red River Archaeology about a Roman villa hidden under a new housing development in Oxfordshire!

Also, you'll hear how Martyn got on when he met up with digger driver Jon Beaver to have a go in his "big yellow trowel" and Time Team's creator, Tim Taylor tells you how he managed to persuade Channel 4 to take the risk to broadcast the programme in 1994.

Ask your questions!

Patreon members have the exclusive opportunity to ask Martyn and Helen questions for future episodes of the podcast. So, if there's anything you'd like to know, please ask away in the comments section of this post.

Episode 2 of the Time Team Podcast has dropped!

Comments

Thank you for selecting and answering my question...πŸ™

Steve Mikre

Thanks for the strap end explanation ❀️

Sam Batstone

Thanks Brent!

Martyn Williams

Great question, thanks!!

Martyn Williams

Loving the podcast πŸ‘ŒπŸ»

Emma

Podcast question - do archaeologists study how things get covered over and at what rates? Floods, major earth movements, new buildings and destruction of existing buildings seem obvious, but what about, for example, how and why Roman villas or World War II items get covered over in fields - often seemingly in only a few decades. Is there a specialization regarding deposition of layers?

Richard Yoast

Excellent podcast! Congratulations on such a strong start. Fascinating to listen to. I also loved hearing about how Time Team started. You are going from strength to strength.

Brent Bossom

Me, too!

Brent Bossom

GREAT PODCAST - Question; how do I get the Time Team to come to my hometown and help us discover more about our ancient town walls? πŸ€”πŸ˜€ https://youtu.be/mdWWKiTpt9A?si=U0UOThteF8TrOm_A

Philip Battle

I could listen to Helen talk about finds for hours. I was wondering if there was ever a consensus about the function of that ornate, hollow, ovoid metal bobble? (January 2024, I think.)

Deborah Foster

Thanks for listening!

Martyn Williams

Also found that the Red River Archaeology folks have done a documentary about the site too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eohPVq1xirs

Christopher Samuel

@Helen @Martyn: During 2020, I introduced my niece to Time Team because of her desire to study anatomy and in particular human bones in burials. We watched several episodes where Phil, Jacki and Alice excavated several graves. Can you speculate on how the Time Team Effect has affected enrollment of new archeological students in the British university system? Cheers.

Mark Gaither

Thanks for sharing the links. The lidar detail of the ridge-and-furrow plowing is remarkable.

Mark Gaither

This is great, I entirely missed the announcement of episode 1 (swamped by work) and so lovely to catch up with both this weekend. The Roman villa at Grove was fascinating - I went and looked and you can currently see the villa excavation on Google Maps: https://www.google.com/maps/@51.6143005,-1.4216711,143m/data=!3m1!1e3?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI0MDkxOC4xIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D Looking at the wonderful National Library of Scotland side-by-side viewer you can compare the 1830s-80s OS 6 inch map with the 50cm LiDAR images and see how the villa site was overlaid with ridge and furrow after it went out of use. https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/side-by-side/#zoom=17.8&lat=51.61437&lon=-1.42206&layers=257&right=LIDAR_DTM_1m

Christopher Samuel

Reminiscences of when we got to dig with you all at Sutton Hoo would be a good member contribution.

Martin Packer

Excellent again.

Martin Packer

Really enjoyed hearing from Stewart and glad he is back along with other early crew members. Made me wonder what Raksha Dave and others are up to/working on?

Shannon

Question: In a broad sense. Has any more Work been done to find Watling Street and Mons Graupius Battlefield? They are just as important, as The Varus Battlefield (i am been there: its spooky)

bayergator

Another superb podcast

Anthony Prince

I missed the first podcast so it's great to suddenly have two episodes to listen to! Since the next episode will be about lidar, I was wondering how and if the appearance of lidar technology has changed the types of sites that get discovered. Are lidar-discovered sites more difficult to dig, for example (hard to access, overgrown, or something like that)?

Mika

Oooh...murder in the monastery, love under the ladar, mosaic mysteries, trouble at Tony's...hey we could have a running competition of archaeological story title!

Min La Vida

I agree, Min! Maybe we need a Time Team short story competition? (Martyn)

Martyn Williams

That's a really good point and an excellent question!

Martyn Williams

Great question!

Martyn Williams

Really enjoying the podcast. Would love to know more about the theme music used for the series, who it's by and how they created it.

Anvilbeard

The villa found in suburbia is a fascinating story... especially given all efforts expended to find something.

Kerry Hennigan

Love the podcast! I've often wondered how you know when to leave things alone for those that will follow you? Tech moves forward and sometimes I feel as much as you want to get at a site, you have to leave some things for those that will follow you or for when the tech improves to a point it can achieve what you currently can't. Think what was lost trying to unroll the Pompeii scrolls.

Graham Dombkins

Question: After watching the latest classic release "Dig by Wire" I was wondering how often archeologists do digs on extreme or difficult sights. I'm guessing it turns into a cost vs safety vs reward. Would the current Time Team funding model make such digs possible or are they just too expensive and dangerous?

Carl Johnson

Brilliant podcasts, thank you, and totally agree with Elaine P - how lovely to be able to listen to Helen for half an hour. Helen - you should narrate some audio books, preferably about archaeology of course!

Min La Vida

Soooo enjoying these podcasts, I could listen to Helen for hours. And how fun that Martyn is getting out in the field - keep going because I'm living variously through you! I think the rhythm and flow are working very well (kudos on the editing, Martyn), and look forward to a Q&A only episode.

Elaine P

Two wonderful questions, Debbie. Thank you very much

Martyn Williams

Thank you Gill!

Martyn Williams

Both episodes were fascinating, excellent! Thank you.

Gill Sawyer

Loving the podcasts. Took me a bit to realize there was no video! Anyway, my first question is: since the sun rises and sets in different locations throughout the year, does this affect the direction a burial is aligned and does that help to figure out when the person was buried? My second question is: sites have been buried under inches/feet of earth since the Roman conquest, so 2000 years. Why is it assumed/known that Iron Age people would still see Bronze Age burials 2000 years later? Wouldn’t those cists also be buried after so long?

Debbie Gerlock

A brilliant question, Julianne!

Martyn Williams

This is such a basic question I’m almost embarrassed to ask: how do things get buried? I’ve been trying to figure out how entire settlements can end up under multiple meters of earth.

Julianne Ture

It's been great to see so many of the "old" Time Team archaeologists involved in the new digs, and sad not to see some of the beloved older ones who have either passed away or retired. I would love to know what Raksha and Bridget are up to these days.

Wessex-Wyvern

This helps. I figured I had to use either Podfollow (which gave the required cookies popup) or only the two that appeared on the Podfollow site (Apple and Spotify). Thank you for clarifying that Audible also works.

Mea Cadwell

Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/time-team/id1572648474

Felix Rowe

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2xTMkQqMzSOUrw13yMcfJ4

Felix Rowe

Hi, there's a range of different platforms you can use to listen to the podcast, including Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Audible. As standard, each platform has its own cookie policy, so you can choose the platform that works best for you.

Felix Rowe

I won't listen to the podcast on the app used due to the required cookies that I AM UNABLE TO OPT OUT OF. Gee, thanks for reducing my ability to have access to the podcasts when I'm a Patron member.

Mea Cadwell

A question: were the people really so willing to let there gardens ripped appart? And how much work was put in the restauration of the gardens?

Chris

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