Heritage Lottery Fund will raise 400-year-old ship with BU

A merman carving from the swash channel wreck

 

A BU led partnership project will make 400-year-old underwater shipwreck accessible to the community through prestigious grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF).

BU led ‘Bringing People to the Museum and the Museum Underwater’ has successfully won full funding of £141,200 from the Lottery Heritage Fund.

The project is a collaboration with BU marine archeologists and Borough of Poole Museum Service which is using the Swash Channel Wreck to encourage people of all ages, backgrounds and abilities to learn about their local maritime archaeological heritage. After conservation, finds from the Wreck and all the information from the excavation will be passed on to Poole Museum Service.

The idea for the project came from BU’s MSc Maritime Archaeology Programme Leader Ms Paola Palma. She said: “I was working with my MSc students on this fascinating underwater site when I realised that only a small group of us – myself and my colleague, the students and few others – would be able to enjoy this incredible maritime heritage. And this made me realise how important it is that we involve not just students, but the wider community.”

The Swash Channel Wreck is an early seventeenth century armed merchant ship lying in 7-9 metres of water in the approach to Poole Harbour on the South coast of the UK. It is a globally significant site containing information about international trade and exchange, science, engineering and social relations of the time.

The elaborately carved rudder, which is estimated to be around 8ft long, is one of the most extraordinary features of the shipwreck. Rudders are only found on a very small number of protected wrecks in Great Britain, including the incomplete rudder of the Mary Rose (1545). Carvings on rudders are even rarer, making this one extremely significant, and it is hoped to be resurrected by the end of summer 2012 if weather permits.

The project aims to bring the shipwreck to a far wider audience than the divers or special interest groups who know about the Wreck at present.

The £75,000 received so far will be used to finance creative ways of exposing the wreck to the public, for example hiring a huge glass tank which will be filled with parts of the ship, with a diver explaining through a loudspeaker what each bit of the ship is to an audience outside.

Michael Spender, Museum Manager, Borough of Poole, said: “We are pleased to be working with Bournemouth University on this exciting project which will involve the whole community. Poole has a fantastic maritime history and I would encourage people to get involved in what is a great opportunity. We look forward to displaying the finds from the Wreck in the Museum.”

Ms Palma said: “Although the MSc Maritime Archaeology course is fundamental in shaping generations of future archaeologists, there is also the need to demolish barriers to engagement in order to allow anyone an equal opportunity to enjoy and engage with their heritage.”

A Project Officer has been employed to give groups access who wouldn’t necessarily be able to visit the site once it has been resurrected, such as visiting people in hospitals, prisons and nursing homes with live streaming equipment of the displays, and replicas of artifacts so they are not cut off from knowledge about their local maritime history.

Nerys Watts, Head of Heritage Lottery Fund South West, said: “The Swash wreck is of international importance, and can provide real insight into the history of our marine trade, science and engineering. This project has the potential to open up this important part of our heritage to the wider community. There is still work for the university to do, but HLF will be offering their full support in taking their application further.”

Bournemouth University and Poole Museum Service welcome the public’s opinion and participation in this exciting project. If you would like to be involved and be part of it please get in touch by emailing ppalma@bournemouth.ac.uk.

Strengthen your CV and skills base with one of our short courses

We are still accepting applications on our summer short courses.  Full details and costs can be found online or contact gseaton@bournemouth.ac.uk

Archaeological Field School, 10th-29th June 2012, limited places available

GIS for Environmental Managers, 11th-14th June 2012

An Introduction to Statistics in R, 20th-22nd June 2012, limited places available

Introduction to Forensic Entomology, 16th-20th July 2012

Mass Graves & Temporary Mortuary, 16th-20th July 2012, limited places available

Forensic Photography, 17th-20th July 2012

 

 

Annual Applied Sciences Postgraduate Research conference – 10th May 2012

The School’s Postgraduate Research conference timetable - Thursday 10th May.   

All BU staff and students welcome to attend.  Any queries contact Eva Reichardt on ereichardt@bournemouth.ac.uk

 When? What? Where?
     
10.00 am Keynote Speech: Tiantian Zhang (Head of the Graduate School) – Postgraduate Research – Your Journey, Your Future CG01
10.20 am Grace Jones: The origins and development of prehistoric pottery production around Poole Harbour, Dorset. CG01
10.40 am Catherine Hess: Human lead exposure in South Africa during the 20th Century: Implications for the past, present and future CG01
11.00 am Tea and Coffee Break  
11.30 am Adam Lodoen: Signature mapping: A method of probabilistic archaeological landscape characterisation CG01
11.50 am Josie Pegg: Assessing and predicting impacts of alien fish parasites: from hosts to ecosystems CG01
12.10 am Kathryn Ross: Understanding fitness-maximising behaviour of overwintering pied avocets CG01
12.30 pm Lunch and Poster Session CG01/ CG11
2.00 pm Alexander Lovegrove: Management Impacts on Biodiversity at the Landscape Scale: A Case Study in The New Forest National Park CG01
2.20 pm Matthew Sumnall: The assessment of habitat condition of the New Forest using airborne remote sensing CG01
2.40 pm Natalia Tejedor: Vulnerability of montane forest to global climate change CG01
3.00 pm Justine Cordingley: Ecosystem service and biodiversity trade-offs in dynamic heathlands CG01
3.20 pm Tea and Coffee Break  
3.50 pm Phil Martin: Effect of non-native invasive plants on ecosystem functions CG01
4.10 pm Tim Burke: Qualitative Analysis of Street Drugs Obtained from Amnesty Bins at the 2010 Glastonbury Festival CG01
4.30 pm Wine reception CG01

The Quarry Life Award – vote for your favourite project now!

As part of The Quarry Life Award, BU’s submission ‘Habitat creation following quarrying at Warmwell: evaluating the contribution made by different habitats to biodiversity gain and to human well-being’ has been selected to continue in the next round of the competition. 

Follow link to read more about the project http://www.quarrylifeaward.com/about/participating-quarries/warmwell-airfield-quarry

The research will be undertaken by a team of Applied Sciences ecology students, led and supervised by Dr Anita Diaz.  Voting is now open to the public to support his/her favourite project.  The most popular project will be highlighted during the Global award ceremony in December.

To vote:  http://www.quarrylifeaward.com/

Applied Sciences Postgraduate Researchers obtain development funding

A number of the School’s postgraduate researchers have been successful in obtaining PGR Development funding awarded by BU’s Graduate School of up to £2,000 each.  This funding will help to provide financial support for the PGR’s research activity and personal development.

The lucky recipients are:

Kathryn Ross, Deborah Steele, Aaron Morris, Innes McCartney, Catherine Hess, Laura Evis, Marie-Christine Dussault, Ivis Chan, Justine Cordingley, Daraporn Chairat and Carolina Castro.

BU Archaeology Society talk – Tuesday 20th March 2012

The undergraduate Archaeological Society have a lecture by Professor Mike Baillie from Queen’s University Belfast this evening at 7:00pm in the Shelley lecture theatre, Talbot campus.

 Professor Baillie was a pioneer in tree-ring dating and the calibration of C14 and has more recently turned his attention to catastrophic environmental events in the ancient and not so ancient past.

 Tonight he will be talking on ‘Tree Rings, Ice Cores, and Past Catastrophes’.   Something for everyone then! Well worth attending if you can.

Applied Sciences students take advantage of BU’s Student Development Award

The Student Development Award is designed to help our students stand out from the crowd and equip themselves with the kind of skills that employers want and twelve of our students have been successful in securing a place.

During the two academic years they can take to complete the award, they will need to complete an e-portfolio, attend three workshops and gain 100 points from extra-curricular activities, which includes most BU and SUBU (Student’s Union) activities and some activities that are external to the University. 

BU students from all levels can apply but the places are limited, so applications need to be strong.  Further information can be found at www.bournemouth.ac.uk/student/award

BU scientist identifies mystery bones

Elizabeth thought the bones to be human

BU scientists were trusted to examine some ancient bones found by builders in a garden of a house in Preston, Weymouth.

The bones were thought to be thousands of years old by BU’s Elizabeth Craig-Atkins.

If you would like to read the full report please visit The Dorset Echo and BBC Dorset