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August 29 2008
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PORTABLE ANTIQUITIES SCHEME HITS THE ROAD AROUND BRITAIN
By Richard Moss 15/11/2004
shows a close-up of a gold Roman coin held between a finger and thumb.

The Portable Antiquities Scheme has uncovered thousands of important finds throughout the UK. Picture © PAS.

Searching for treasure and metal detecting seems to be one of those quintessentially English obsessions. Sometimes solitary, sometimes carried out in groups it has become one of those signifiers of our eccentricity.

TV Programmes like Time Team and Hidden Treasure have only added to a surge in interest. After all, who can now deny the thrill involved when finding an ancient artefact or the excitement in discovering something that affords an instant connection to someone or some time in the distant past?

Now the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS), the voluntary recording scheme for many of these archaeological objects and finds, has organised a series of ‘finds roadshows’ with the aim of enticing more members of the public into bringing their discoveries in for appraisal by the scheme's Finds Liaison Officers.

Anna Marshall (S&W Yorkshire Finds Liaison Officer) records finds at a local metal-detecting club. © PAS.

shows a group of thee men sat around a table with a woman. They are discussing a group of small metal objects.

“This is a great opportunity because the Finds Liaison Officers do a lot of finds days out in the field but the finds roadshows will bring them all together under one roof,” Michael Lewis, Deputy Director of the PAS, told the 24 Hour Museum.

“We have tended to work with metal detector clubs in the past because they yield about 60 to 70% of the finds - they tend to be easier to target and a finds liaison officer can meet up to 60 in one go," added Dr Lewis. "But a big problem is meeting other members of the public and independent detectorists. I think one way of achieving this is through the roadshows.”

Organised for Saturday, November 27, 2004, and located in seven regions in England and Wales, the roadshows are designed to consolidate on the success of a scheme that has been bridging the gap between amateur and professional archaeology since pilot schemes began in 1997.

shows a woman kneeling down in the middle of a field. She is reaching down into a hole and is flanked by two men holding a spade and a metal detector.

Essex Finds Liaison Officer Caroline Macdonald investigating a find below 'ploughsoil level' during a controlled metal detecting survey in northeast Essex. Picture © Colchester Museums.

Treasure hunting by members of the public has caused much debate – with many professional archaeologists voicing concern that unsupervised metal detecting is in effect looting our archaeological heritage.

But in recent years there has been something of a sea change, with both the metal detecting and archaeological communities finding some common ground. This is due in large measure to the PAS.

With thousands of finds reported each year the amateur discoveries are increasingly being viewed as an important source for the fuller understanding our past. Finds Liason Officers are building structured relationships with metal detectorists and field walkers; find locations are being carefully logged and recorded ensuring our archaeology doesn’t merely disappear into private collections.

Kurt Adams (Gloucestershire & Avon Finds Liaison Officer) examines an object at a finds day at Gloucester Cathedral. Picture © PAS.

shows two men stood in a crowded church. One man is examining an object from a paper bag that the other man is holding.

Dr Lewis believes there is, however, still some way for the scheme to go and that some people may be mindful of the pressure some local museums are under.

"Perhaps they are worried about pressurising curators with their finds," he explained, “but one of the main aims of the PAS has been to change perception and to make people realise that you can go to museums with your finds and say; ‘what is this?’”

"The PAS is an effective way for us to find the finders," added Dr Lewis, "now the roadshows offer members of the public the chance to come to us."

So if you have ever found an archaeological item in your garden, dug something up using a metal detector or stumbled across an object whilst walking the dog – don’t throw it into a drawer and forget about it – get along to a finds roadshow and find out what it is.

Not only might you be sitting on a valuable piece of treasure but you can also contribute to an ever-increasing understanding of Britain’s past.

The roadshows take place in Colchester, Coalville, Exeter, Reading, Shrewsbury, Wrexham and York. For full details of times and locations visit the Portable Antiquities Scheme website at www.finds.org.uk

To give you a flavour of the forthcoming roadshows, the 24 Hour Museum has been talking to Finds Liaison Officers in the regions.

Over the next week they will be telling us about their experiences of administering the PAS as well as revealing some of the amazing finds they have encountered - giving an insight into the archaeological landscape that surrounds us.

The series started in Essex where we talked to Finds Liaison Officer Caroline McDonald.

Next we looked at Devon where Nicky Powell revealed some of the things that land on the desk of an FLO.

In Shropshire and Herefordshire FLO Peter Reavill explained the historical topography of the Welsh Marches.

Simon Holmes in North and East Yorkshire expounded the virtues of 'community archaeology'.

In Wales Mark Lodwick explained how field walkers are returning a vast amount of archaeological evidence about pre-historic Wales.

In Oxfordshire and Berkshire Kate Sutton told us about the vast range of finds coming through the scheme.

Colchester Castle Museum
 

Castle Park, Colchester, CO1 1TJ, Essex, England
T: 01206 282939
Open: Mon-Sat 1000-1700 Sun 1100-1700

Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery
 

Queen Street, Exeter, EX4 3RX, Devon, England
T: 01392 665858
Open: N.B. Main Museum building currently closed for refurbishment, re-opens Spring 2010 However, you can visit RAMM in the Library, Exeter Museum's city centre home while the Queen Street building is being redeveloped. Based next door to Exeter Central Library in Castle Street, Exeter, RAMM in the library has a range of objects on display and there are also hands-on gallery activities. RAMM in the Library is an ideal place for family visits. RAMM in the Library is Open Mon-Sat 1000-1700, Admission Free. Please see our listings on 24 Hour Museum website or the Museum's own website for the wide programme of exhibitions, events and activities taking place around Exeter and Devon whilst the main Museum building is closed. You can also visit St Nicholas Priory - A Tudor Home, at the Mint, off Fore St Exeter. In part of what was once a medieval priory this splendid building was later lived in by the wealthy Hurst family. It is now presented as their Elizabethan town house with replica furniture, sumptuous fabrics and rich colours. Come and feel at home in this historic family home. Open on Saturdays and on weekdays during school holidays 10.00 - 17.00. Admission £2 for adults (£1.50 concessions), children free. All children aged under 8 must be accompanied by an adult. www.exeter.gov.uk/priory

Museum of Reading
 

Museum of Reading, Town Hall, Blagrave Street, Reading, RG1 1QH, Berkshire, England
T: 0118 939 9800
Open: Tues-Sat 1000-1600
Sunday & Bank Holidays 1100-1600
Closed: Monday - except Half Term (October and February 10.00-16.00)

Wrexham County Borough Museum
 

Wrexham County Borough Museum, County Buildings, Regent Street, LL11 1RB, Wrexham, Wales
T: 01978 317 970
Open: Mon - Fri 1000-1700 Sat 1030 - 1500
Closed: Sundays

Yorkshire Museum & Gardens, York
 

Museum Gardens, York, YO1 7FR, North Yorkshire, England
T: 01904 687687
Open: Daily 1000-1700
Closed: Closed 25/26 December, 1 January

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