Articles | Volume 29, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.1144/jm.29.1.87
https://doi.org/10.1144/jm.29.1.87
01 Apr 2010
 | 01 Apr 2010

Micropalaeontology reveals the source of building materials for a defensive earthwork (English Civil War?) at Wallingford Castle, Oxfordshire

Ian P. Wilkinson, Alison Tasker, Anthony Gouldwell, Mark Williams, Matt Edgeworth, Jan Zalasiewicz, and Neil Christie

Cited articles

M., Airs, K., Rodwell and H., Turner: WallingfordIn: (Ed.), Historic Towns in Oxfordshire: A Survey of the New CountyOxfordshire Archaeological Unit, Oxford, 155–162., 1975.
R. T. J., Cappers, R. M., Bekker and J. E. A., Jans: Digitale Zadenatlas van Nederland/Digital Seed Atlas of the NetherlandsBarkhuis and Groningen University Library, Groningen, 502pp., 2006.
H. K., Kenward, A. R., Hall and A. K. G., Jones: A tested set of techniques for the extraction of plant and animal macrofossils from waterlogged archaeological depositsScience and Archaeology, 13: 3–15World Wide Web address: http://www.york.ac.uk/inst/chumpal/EAU-reps/testedset.pdf, 1980.
K., Perch-Nielsen: Fossil coccoliths as indicators of the origin of late Cretaceous chalk used in medieval Norwegian artIn Universitetets oldsaksamlings drbok 1970–71Oslo, 161–169., 1973.
P. S., Quinn and P. M., Day: Ceramic micropalaeontology: the analysis of microfossils in ancient ceramics, Journal of Micropalaeontology, 26, 159-168, 2007.