Andrew Burn
@apburn44.bsky.social
120 followers 190 following 89 posts
Archaeologist, Development Advice Team Leader for Yorkshire Region at Historic England. Committee Member @landscapesurvey.bsky.com Views here my own. #archaeology #landscapearchaeology #heritage #nature #outdoors
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Love Grimshaw. Some of his gloomy dramatic dockland work still hangs in my childhood home. Always conjured up mental images of Holmes and Watson.
Fantastic couple of days visiting 50 Scheduled Sites in the Yorkshire Wolds last week. Covered alot of ground and alot of Barrows!
Low earthworks of a Bronze Age barrows with serval trees on top, set in a large green pasture field, with blue skies above A prehistoric cross dyke at the edge of a stubble field, with a hawthorn hedge along the bank. Rolling green fields and trees stretch into the distance, with clear blue skies above
Some more scribblings. This time in advance of a talk im goving tonight on the landscape history of the area around Cropton, North Yorkshire.

open.substack.com/pub/andrewbu...
Cropton: Brief History of a Landscape
Exploration of a well trod North Yorkshire landscape
open.substack.com
Reposted by Andrew Burn
What a soul we have lost.
God bless her
Dr. Jane Goodall filmed an interview with Netflix in March 2025 that she understood would only be released after her death.
I stumbled over this railway embankment, for sidings serving mine works in Murk Esk, and now I can't thinking about the archaeology of railways.
Reposted by Andrew Burn
*FUNGI APPRECIATION POST*

Are we all in agreement that fungi are the best thing about autumn? These incredible specimens were snapped by Siân Lloyd in Bannau Brycheiniog (Brecon Beacons). You can find fungi in damp, shady areas, particularly in woodlands.

Have you spotted any yet?
A shiny, red-topped mushroom on the mossy base of a tree. A ginormous, brown mushroom with a flat top is nestled in green grass and moss. A tiny, bright red topped mushroom perches on the twig-laden floor of a forest. A cascade of flat beige mushrooms slopes down the twig-laden woodland floor.
Ive been scribbling my thoughts about the landscape around Cropton and had to share this lovely Peter Dunn reconstruction of the Motte and Bailey Castle just outside the modern village.

(Found on the Woodland Trust Interpretation Panel for the site)
Fantastic Peter Dunn reconstruction painting of the medieval village of Cropton with crofts reaching. Ack to a stone and wood motte and bailey castle on the edge of a green wooded ridge.
Reposted by Andrew Burn
Thank you so much to everyone who has already subscribed to my Substack #AllAndSundry! 🥰 so happy to hear that you've been enjoying my #aviationhistory articles. Whether you'd like to join as a free or paid subscriber, it'd be fabulous to have you...

substack.com/@spitfirefil...
Reposted by Andrew Burn
Great to meet such a diverse and lively group of archaeologists, ecologists, farmers, geographers etc at our 'Archaeology in Wilding' workshop earlier this month. Thank you @kneppwilding.bsky.social for the beautiful venue, Guerilla Archaeology and all others who contributed! #WildWednesdays
Thanks for sharing Jonathan, will certainly be looking for more opportunities for collaboration like this as we advise on the Levisham project!
Reposted by Andrew Burn
www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bEv... For decades we've worked to enhance the Sheffield Zooarch Lab & to see years of dedication destroyed by corporate executives who know the cost of everything and the value of nothing is heart breaking @watchingbrief.bsky.social #savesheffieldarchaeology
The destruction of the Zooarch laboratories in Sheffield
YouTube video by Sheffield Zooarchaeology Lab
www.youtube.com
Another treat on a cold morning walk.
Low sun and steaming, freshly ploughed fields are definitely a sign autumn is on the way.
Freshly ploughed fields, steaming in the cold morning air, under blue skies and a backdrop of deciduous trees.
Reposted by Andrew Burn
Reposted by Andrew Burn
I sometimes wonder if structured deposition helped people deal with trauma in prehistory...
I've found research proving that arranging small lovely items like these👇 alleviates PTSD-will be part of my small museums
for mental health wshop Sat 4 Oct
Open to anyone,recorded in full in,3.5 hrs tuition,30% off my Etsy.Earlybird price expires in 4 days:
workshops.emmamitchell.uk/courses/smal...
A woodland wander on my lunch.
A pair of speckled wood butterflies on lush green ferns A 6 spot red ladybird on lush green ferns Dark metallic blue Rosemary Beetles on  lush green leaves that they are eating A pair of 6 spot lady birds on a dried up brown leaf.
Morning meeting with the national park at Byland.
The striking ruins of the west end of Byland Abbey, including the Rose Womdow, under blue skies and silhouetted against the morning sun
Ahh the homeland. My first ever history project in primary school was on Leasowe Lighthouse (pictured) 🤣
🚶🏻‍♂️‍➡️🚶🏻➡️Wirral Heritage Open Days starts today until 21st September. Many amazing places to visit, some are only open for the annual heritage open days🤩
drive.google.com/file/d/1qWH4...
#Wirral #history #heritage
Lovely day out and about at the Towton Battle site yesterday. Particularly loved the new hedgerows as they coincidentally were planted the week my son was born!
Reposted by Andrew Burn
Whitby Abbey in the wind today.
Black and white image of Whitby Abbey ruins under cloudy skies
A weekend of father son exploring this weekend and had to let the boy use Byland as an adventure playground.
The ruins of Byland Abbey under grey skies, with a toddler exploring a green grassy cloister in the foreground.
Managed to join last night, great talk, looking forward to seeing what the excavation reveals!