[{"id": 136381, "created": "2020-04-29T12:12:30.738127", "project_id": 456, "task_id": 84303, "user_id": 580, "user_ip": null, "finish_time": "2020-04-29T12:14:00.403716", "timeout": null, "calibration": null, "external_uid": null, "media_url": null, "info": {"NGR": "SP 409;501", "Site": "OXFORDSHIRE;STANTON HARCOURT;BARROW FIELD;Site XVI, I (Barrow)", "CollHist": "Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.\r\n1940. 172 to 182. For individual Accession Numbers see \"contents\".", "Contents": "Metal\r\n(1) Dagger, heel damaged but originally three rivet-holes ; three loose rivets. Sets if three light grooves on either side of midrib. Wood of sheath adhering to blade. Ref (c) mentions \"remains of thin bronze sheeting which seems to have been folded over \"the mouth of the sheath.\r\n(1940.173)\r\n(2) Slender bronze rod, tapering to a point, originally interpreted as a sharpening tool because found in sheath beside dagger (1). Ref (c) also mentions \"a small piece of bent wire\" adhering towards the end of this object.\r\n(1940.174)\r\nOther\r\n(3) Biconical incense cup (1940.175)\r\n(4) Flint \"fabricator\" (1940.176)\r\n(5) Bone pinhead (perforated) formed from a bird's tibia (1940.177)\r\n(6) Bone pin, oblong section with median groove on one face (1940.182)\r\n(7) Amber bead with cylindrical perforation (1940.179)\r\n(8) Jet bead (1940.180)\r\n(9) Bead of fossil sponge (1940.178)\r\n(10) Perforated whetstone (1940.172)\r\n(11) Scrap of horn stained green from adjacent dagger (1). ? Part of hilt (1940.181)", "comments": "", "ArchiveEtc": "Rec. S.H. 15.4.82.", "ContextType": "2a GRAVE", "BiblioSources": "(a) Ashmolean Museum Report (1940) 5 Plate II\r\n(b) Harden (1940) 161-2\r\n(c) Harden & Treweeks (1945) 21-42, 40-41\r\n(d) Inventaria Archaeologica GB 15 (1956) 3rd Set\r\n(e) Grimes (1960) 143 Fig 58\r\n(f) Case (1963) 42\r\n(g) Gerloff (1975) 103 N\u00b0 170.", "Circumstances": "Found in 1940 when the remaining part of the barrow was partially excavated by D.B. Harden, assisted by R.J.C. Atkinson and R.C. Treweaks, prior to levelling during airfield construction. In the centre of the barrow, on the original land surface, the body had been cremated on an oval pyre. The cremated bones were spread over the pyre with the grave-goods (1-11) and covered with reddened earth. A shallow pit was dug through the pyre to hold the ashes. The dagger (1) lay in a mass of decayed wood, almost covered by a layer of \"leather\".\r\nReferences (e) and (f) number the site as Stanton Harcourt XVI, I ; the remaining references use the earlier nomenclature \"Site 4\".", "FindAltSiteRel": "Site 4 Stanton Harcourt"}}, {"id": 140904, "created": "2020-06-08T11:38:34.364961", "project_id": 456, "task_id": 84303, "user_id": 2006, "user_ip": null, "finish_time": "2020-06-08T11:39:15.263052", "timeout": null, "calibration": null, "external_uid": null, "media_url": null, "info": {"NGR": "", "Site": "", "CollHist": "", "Contents": "", "comments": "", "ArchiveEtc": "", "ContextType": "", "BiblioSources": "", "Circumstances": "", "FindAltSiteRel": ""}}]