Once you’ve taken a photo, you need to start filling out a context sheet. This includes filling out the boxes at the top, drawing anything you can see sticking through the dirt, and describing the colour and composition of your context context. It’s time to get your hands dirty!
✏️ Fill in the site code
The site code is the same for everyone: LVL21.
✏️ Fill in your test pit number
Enter the test pit number we gave you during the morning workshop.
✏️ Add context number
The first context you will record will be the turf you remove. Everyone will remove 10cm of turf/soil. Treat this as the top soil we’d strip in larger trench. Each context in a three digit number (T-NN) where ‘T’ is your test pit number. If your Test Pit number is 4, your first context number will be 401, and your second one will be 402.
✏️ Draw a plan of the top of the context
For the plan you will draw what you can see at the top of the context, you can draw in any finds you can see, and the boundry between different contexts.
✏️ Describe what you drew
In the box below describe what you’ve draw – add a key if you’ve drawn in finds, describe in words what you’ve drawn.
✏️ Fill in the soil description
This includes:
✏️ Compaction
How easy was the soil to remove? Glossary terms include:
- Compact
- Loose
- Hard
- Soft
- Friable
- Firm
- Spongey
✏️ Colour
We describe colour in three parts: value (whether is light, medium or dark), hue (the colour it is slightly ie. pinkish), and finally the main colour. Please stick to basic colours e.g. brown, black, red, pink, green. Not chocolate or burgundy!
✏️ Composition
This is all about identifying what type of soil you have – clay, silt, or sand. Clay is the finest, sand is the grittiest. This can tell us a lot about the environment and what was happening!
✏️ Inclusions
What inclusions do you have? (Common ones include: chalk, charcoal, flint, pebbles). How frequent are they? What shape are they? What size are they? (Small? Medium? or large?) Are they well sorted? E.g. Common small pieces of poorly sorted sub-angular flint
Ta dah!