HS2 dig: archaeologists begin examining 10,000 years of history along 150-mile route

Hundreds of experts search for artefacts at 60 different sites in what is thought to be Europe's largest excavation

Tom Barnes
Friday 26 October 2018 16:22 BST
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The HS2 archaeological dig starts

Archaeologists have uncovered artefacts spanning 10,000 years of British history as they conduct what is thought to be Europe’s largest dig along the route of the new HS2 line.

Experts from the £56bn project have begun work on a programme to excavate sites the length of the 150-mile route between London and the West Midlands.

Neolithic tools, medieval pottery and Victorian time capsules have already been discovered.

More than 1,000 archaeologists have been enlisted to examine 60 sites along the route.

Areas of interest include a prehistoric hunter-gatherer site on the outskirts of London, a Roman British town near Aylesbury, a 1,000-year-old demolished medieval church and burial ground in Buckinghamshire and a Second World War bombing decoy in Lichfield.

“Before we bore the tunnels, lay the tracks and build the stations, an unprecedented amount of archaeological research is now taking place between London and Birmingham,” HS2 chief executive Mark Thurston said.

A time capsule from 1884 has already been discovered on the HS2 route in London (PA)

“This is the largest archaeological exploration ever in Britain, employing a record number of skilled archaeologists and heritage specialists from across the UK and beyond.”

As part of the dig, tens of thousands of skeletons will be removed from a burial ground at St James’s Gardens next to London’s Euston station.

In recent months, protests and a memorial service have been held at the site where 60,000 people were buried from 1790 to 1853.

Proposed route for the HS2 high speed rail scheme

HS2 said all artefacts and human remains would be treated with dignity, care and respect, and a four-part documentary on finds uncovered by the project will air on the BBC in 2019.

“With the building of HS2 comes a once-in-a-generation opportunity to improve our understanding of how people have shaped England’s landscapes over thousands of years, from the first prehistoric farmers through Roman and Saxon and Viking incomers to the more recent past,” said Duncan Wilson, chief executive of government heritage body Historic England.

More than 1,000 archaeologists are involved in the project to examine 60 sites of interest (PA)

Construction began on HS2 this year after almost a decade of arguments over the project’s cost and its eventual impact.

Some have questioned the likelihood of the initial London to Birmingham section of the route opening as scheduled in 2026, while a freedom of information request revealed the programme is already running £7bn over budget.

A second phase of the project, extending the line in two forks to Manchester and Leeds, is earmarked for completion in 2033.

Additional reporting by PA

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