The Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) is a project run by the British
Museum which encourages the voluntary reporting of archaeological
artefacts discovered by members of the public in England and Wales,
particularly metal detector users. Finds are recorded onto a database
(available at www.finds.org.uk), and this resource now holds records for
over 800,000 archaeological objects, a figure which increases on a daily
basis. Since its establishment in 1997, it has become a key resource for
archaeological researchers.
Around 40 per cent of the artefacts recorded on the database are of
Roman date, and the principal aim of this book is to assess the
contribution that this resource can make to our understanding of Roman
Britain. Bringing together vast quantities of seemingly random finds
scattered across the English and Welsh countryside, Tom Brindle brings
order to this data by showing how it can be used to indicate the
presence of 240 previously unknown Roman sites. These sites are
presented within a series of regional case studies which discuss
important new sites as well as statistics that contribute significantly
to the understanding of the density of settlement in rural Roman
Britain.