I've binge - watched TT at least 6x in the past year. So very,very interesting and educational. Thanks to Reijer Zaaijer for all these TT full season videos & other shows he offers. Lastly, thankyou, in that you've provided these great shows WITHOUT commercial interuptions. Perfect.
ive been goingthru alot lately and i fall asleep watching these episodes everynight...i literally feel so good just hearing phils and tonys voice...i feel like i have a friend around or something...thank you for posting alll these episodes idk what id be doing without them :-(
100% agree. I’ve had terrible personal life stress for the last few years. I,discovered your Time Team uploads and they have helped me be calm many nights when I awoke with panic and insomnia. Bless you!
I like it when Time Team dig in people's backyards -they are going back to their roots, in a way, especially when you remember their earlier seasons when that was much more common.
Such was my dream 50 years ago. The science requirements kept me from even trying. Here in the States, a degree in archaeology require advanced chemistry and math among other things. My dreams of piecing together pottery shards and translating ancient Sanskrit remain dreams. So I watch TT and visit archaeology magazines online and think there's always my next lifetime. :)
Join the club of never matching another sock. Then you have two choices. Wear unmatched socks as a fashion statement. It is actually done. Or do like me & only buy the same type of sock.
@@Nirrrina , My late beloved husband was going to invent a washing machine or tumble dryer with an electronic eye that would deliver socks washed or dried 9depending on weather) in matched pairs.
I have tried multiple times to add my “like” but am unable so to do. I love these Time Team programs. They are timeless! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR UPLOADING THESE VIDEOS. YOU ARE AWESOME, Reijer!
Watching these videos what I enjoy most is not so much the archeological digging ( I love archeology since I was a child, I am 79 now) but the beautiful expanse of countryside in England.
DuraFunk, thank you; answered my question and more. Just checked Amazon. It has some sets and I purchased a couple of books re TT. Started viewing with S01-E01 and into year thirteen at the moment. More than archaeology. Had seen Black Adder; astonished that Tony was the presenter, kept the disparate parts flowing together. Unequaled presentations. I had only watched few here in USA, didn't realize the extent of the program. Thanks to you and Reijer.
Glad de la guy mentions that later centuries would not have vast amounts of seriously vintage stuff lying around. It was pre mass production after all. Some/many families have 6 generation silver sets.
Ruins have taught me a lesson...we work so hard for a beautiful home and then we die leaving it to destruction. The only thing that out lives us is how we changed the world.
I doubt if lightning can strike twice. Robin is dead and gone, so is Mick, Phils almost 70. You can start out with a new team but it may never have the magic that the old show had. They tried to do one in America and it just flopped.
@@scarletfluerr It was sad that *Time Team America* only lasted two seasons but the approach had to be different. The necessary comparative slowness of *USA* archæologists made 3 days too short and longer digs would have been too expensive. Add to that the _dumbing-down_ (which wasn't all that bad) and you've a recipe for failure however good the other production values are.
44:48 I’m with Guy in this debate. How much digital records will survive and will be compatible 180 years from now. All it would take would be a solar storm a couple of magnitudes greater than the Carrington event of 1859 to corrupt it.
First, thanks to the contributor. I have been watching these episodes as often I can. I intend to watch them all. Next I would like to complement the commenters who leave the best responses completely without the rancor found in responses to other contributions on RU-vid. My question is what happens after the Time Team leaves the site? Who is responsible for restoring people's yards/property or do they sign away that right in order to have their yards investigated?
There's an short video here on RU-vid where they talk to Kerry and he stays behind for a day or two after the rest of the team buggar off with a small team to put everything back to almost as it was before as best they can. They then go onto the next site and prepared for when the rest of the Time Team rock up on Friday. Dull things to watch like setting up the incident room, putting up tents, sorting finds trays and importing Phil's payment of 3 barrels of good ale a day for his meals 😂 its quite an interesting little clip and only about 5 ish mins long
Its nice to share history with people especially the children but did they really have to show that little boy picking his noise? ..haha. Well it was a great dig and nice to see the people of the village take such an interest in their local history. Thanks for posting this video.
A few were made in *France,* a couple in the *West Indies,* a couple in the *USA,* a few elsewhere in *Europe,* a couple in the *Channel Islands* and a couple in *Northern Ireland.* The vast bulk were, however, in *Britain.*
The best part was the little girl making the bad smell face as Phil and Tony gross her out. Looks like she's going to start crying and call for her Mum.
I'm a typical American viewer who over the last two years, has watched everything at least twice and in some cases, 5. In all that time there's a few questions I've thought: One, is everything done in those three days, ie clearing brush and any other debris before production is started and two, do some of the clients let what was excavated, to remain so? Thanks before hand should anyone ever happen along to this episode...
Why would the locals (especially the parents of teenagers) have objected to the tearing down of the copse? The only use for something like that is a place for the teens to go hide to smoke, drink, and make out, etc.
one tenth of the geo phys finds nothing in a huge field is no time to panic. take a deep breath. calm down. you found mosaic near the copse. look there.
What about having done the Geophys not in the beginning of those three days, but before? And doing the testpits not so tiny small as they are dug? Or digging tiny small pits in bigger trenches as Phil did? It's not the proper way of digging such an important building, even if its mostly covered by modern houses.
I don't think I'd be very happy to have big trenches dug into my nice grass. I'd do it because it's absolutely fascinating to watch it go on. Not to mention exciting. But I'd still feel very sorry for the poor pretty grass. It would regrow though. Eventually.
Obviously modern farm plowing has reduced all the Roman pottery to shards. The antiquarians found numerous whole pottery, but all modern digs they are just tiny pieces. The whole notion they 'dropped them' and then they were broken up is probably not true.
Even in secure Roman contexts undisturbed by later plowing, when you dig their ditches and middens, they're FULL of broken pots. The Romans made a lot more pottery than the cultures that came before and after them (in Britain) and they broke a lot of it. Pottery was highly disposable to them, the way we view plastic plates today. You do occasionally find prestige pieces that they've mended with lead rivets, but mostly they just chucked it out. You only tend to find whole vessels in graves/cemeteries and ritual places (temples, shrines, springs etc). What's unfortunate is that a lot of vessels in those contexts probably survived whole in the ground for the better part of two millennia, only to get busted up by deep plowing and destructive industrial activity in the last 100 years 😕
I've watched most of these programs. Some of them 3 or 4 times. It would be really wonderful if Tony would just shut his pie hole. Sometimes he is really rude to John.
You do realize these programs are for entertainment? Which means all kinds of characters playing all kinds of parts. Tony is the foil, he's supposed to be annoying asking questions that the uneducated person would ask and being impatient for results the way people at home are impatient to see if they find anything. The fact that you're commenting here shows he's doing it well. Guy himself said it's all scripted.
Tony is just doing his job, really. Well, one of his jobs. He's the narrator. He's also the everyman, asking the questions the audience would ask. He's also the explainer, putting things in words the audience needs (you can see him doing that really well here, when Phil talks to the schoolkids). He's also the gadfly: when things go well, he asks if that is all he will be given, or if they really have things right; when things go slowly, he asks what's wrong. He's also the court jester, joking around and teasing everyone about their successes and their failures. It is ridiculous to ask one person to do all this, much of it essentially live. And yet Tony succeeds at it. So when he is being rude to someone, there is a reason, and he's working partly from a script for production reasons. He's not doing it to be mean. And you can see that all the archaeologists know that.
45:00 Guy obviously doesn't know how GPS works - the readings given on a GPS device correlate very precisely to coordinates on any given map that shows Greenwich at 0deg latitude and the Equator at 0deg longitude. As long as that doesn't change, then a GPS coordinate won't change either.
I think you've missed his point. He meant quite simply that these things can change and go out of use. It's happening now as there are no COBOL programmers and loads of critical software written in COBOL. His point was that coordinates on GPS may become difficult to correlate with what's on the ground.
@@philaypeephilippotter6532 But GPS coordinates point to the exact same coordinates that are used by the geographic coordinate system of longitude and latitude that pre-dates GPS by many, many years. Even if all GPS satellites fall out of the sky you could still take a set of "old" GPS coordinates and find that place on a detailed map with proper grid reference. It's not like the old OMEGA system that used radio frequencies to plot a point - those coordinates are of no use today because you need those exact radio transmitters to find the location you are looking for, and the transmitters were turned off in the late 1990s. However 37.422°N 122.084°W will always be 37.422°N 122.084°W no matter if the GPS system is turned off (those coordinates are for Google HQ, by the way).
@@philaypeephilippotter6532 that's not how GPS/GLONASS works bud. Those coordinates are universal, and directly correlate to the latitude and longitude coordinates that have been in use since forever. You can use any set of GPS coordinates to find a position on a paper map. Unless the planet changes in size and shape, GPS coordinates are infinitely accurate.
The problem is how long will the digital record last. And if it last will we be able to read it. The biggest natural threat to our technological civilisation is a Solar storm Like the Carrington event. How much would survive?
Wish I had Stewart's geographical bump. I'm lost when I go into a shop by one door and exit by another in a different street. Corner shops are not what are meant to be ...
Based on what I have seen the usual diggers are Matt, Matt "the Dig", Ian, Kerry, plus a few others whom I haven't seen named. Then Faye, Raksha, Brigid, Tracey, Scarlett, and a few others. You don't often see the personnel who speak to the camera digging, except as you say Phil. But I think that is his role as it were.
Well, seeing as how there are a mix of disciplines, that would stand to reason. Stewart is a Surveyor, as is John. It isn't their job to dig. I mean, why do none of the ladies ever help them? Maybe because they're doing their own job? Are you the type to try and "assist" someone with a job you're not qualified to perform?
John Gaters geologists maps are so wrong most of the time, Stuart as a land surveyor has more intelligence than those machines. He(John the Geophysicist) always says there is something there, and more than likely there is nothing. I really like to skip over his explanations of where something is according to his readings, it really makes him look bad if nothing is there.
Something there doesn't always mean a wall, it could be ashes from a burned down wall, a robbed out Trench or deteriorated wood. Just because you don't get a wall doesn't mean John was wrong. Plus you can only go by the readings he can't see through the dirt.
Quote: 'so wrong most of the time.' Really? I don't know what episodes you watched, but in most cases he is totally right, as in this excavation. He and Stewart are two of the unsung heroes of the series, and thats not only my opinion...
So, in 500 or 1000 years from now, when Tony’s ancestors are hosting the then Time Team, they will be confounded by I’ll of the funny little smelly white plastic things strewn all over the world?
Power tools are not what you'd call "delicate". They do much of the work by hand to avoid damaging any of the archaeology. Leave the planning and logistics to those with the proper qualifications, m'kay?
bens imagination may get the better of him, but at least he lets them dig, more than can be said for a lot of other people, myself i prefer the trees to be there
19:47 "see the dead roman.... stand back... dead roman"? wtf why talk like that, using deliberately alarming language... poor kids, they're only tiddlers.