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		Archaeologists hail find of 
		'best-preserved' UK Bronze Age dwellings 
		
		 
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		[January 12, 2016] 
		LONDON (Reuters) - Archaeologists 
		said on Tuesday they had discovered what were believed to be the 
		best-preserved Bronze Age dwellings ever found in Britain, providing an 
		extraordinary insight into prehistoric life from 3,000 years ago. 
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			 The settlement of large circular wooden houses, built on stilts, 
			collapsed in a fire and plunged into a river where it was preserved 
			in silts leaving them in pristine condition, Historic England said. 
			 
			Discoveries from the dwellings in Whittlesey, in central England, 
			which archaeologists said had been frozen in time and dated from 
			between 1000-800 BC, included pots with food inside and finely woven 
			clothing. 
			 
			"We are learning more about the food our ancestors ate, and the 
			pottery they used to cook and serve it," Duncan Wilson, Chief 
			Executive of Historic England, said in a statement. 
			
			  "This site is of international significance and its excavation will 
			transform our understanding of the period." 
			 
			Among the finds at the site, about two meters (6.5 ft) below the 
			modern ground surface, are exotic glass beads forming part of a 
			necklace, rare small cups, bowls and jars. Archaeologists also said 
			that the site was so well preserved that even the footprints of 
			those who lived at the site had been discovered. 
			 
			There are also charred roof timbers clearly visible in one of the 
			houses and the excavation team have speculated that those living at 
			the settlement abandoned it in haste when it caught fire. 
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			David Gibson, Archaeological Manager at the Cambridge Archaeological 
			Unit, said they only usually came across a few pits or metal finds 
			at Bronze Age sites. 
			 
			"This time so much more has been preserved - we can actually see 
			everyday life during the Bronze Age in the round," he said. "It's 
			prehistoric archaeology in 3D with an unsurpassed finds assemblage 
			in terms of range and quantity." 
			 
			(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Guy Faulconbridge) 
			
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