The DP World London Gateway Port, on the north bank of the Thames, is a
major development of a new container terminal. Its construction has been
accompanied by a major dredging scheme that has increased the depth of
sections of the approach channel over a length of c. 100km, from the
outer reaches of the Thames to the new terminal. From its beginning,
this scheme included careful consideration of the archaeological
consequences of dredging in such a historically-important estuary. Over
the course of a decade, investigations by Wessex Archaeology have
provided a new perspective on the historic environment of the Thames,
and explored innovative archaeological approaches and methodologies for
addressing marine developments of this type and scale. This volume sets
out the challenges, results and history of these investigations, and the
context and constraints encountered. The results contribute to our
knowledge of maritime archaeology in the Thames Estuary and to the wider
practice of marine development-led archaeology. A companion volume on
the terrestrial investigations conducted by Oxford Archaeology is
presented in London Gateway: Iron Age and Roman Salt Making in the
Thames Estuary. Excavations at Stanford Wharf Nature Reserve, Essex.