Archaeological Excavations and Surveys
Introduction
The archaeological authority for the Borough
of Melton is the Leicestershire County Council. The County Council
maintain a 'Sites and Monuments Register', in which details of
known sites and archaeological finds are recorded. An initial
consultation will show whether there are any known, or likely,
archaeological remains within or adjacent to a proposed
development. On the basis of this preliminary appraisal, it may be
necessary to commission a fuller archaeological assessment or
evaluation by a professionally qualified archaeological contractor.
The report on this work should accompany the planning application,
and include an assessment of the archaeological effects of the
development and any measures proposed to reduce it's impact.
The Local Planning Authority may defer a
planning decision until this information is available. The first
priority is the preservation of significant archaeological remains
in situ. To achieve this, the archaeological impact of the
development should be minimised by, for example, sympathetic
foundation design or amendments to the layout. If this is not
feasible, then detailed excavation, recording and publication is
the second best option. Archaeological implications will be a
material consideration for the Local Planning Authority when making
a planning decision. If further archaeological work is necessary
this can be secured, either by the use of a planning condition, or
by a legal agreement under section 106 of the Town and Country
Planning Act 1990. In other cases, particularly small-scale
development, recording of archaeologicalremains during development
may be advised; this is known as a watching brief and will normally
be secured by a planning condition.
Archaeology in Practice
Archaeological work, before and during development, can take a
number of forms :-
desk-based
assessment: a detailed appraisal of available
information about a site before a planning application is submitted
or approved.
field
evaluation: a survey or trial excavation designed
to assess the nature of archaeological remains within a proposed
development area before a planning application is submitted or
approved. Techniques may include field walking, geophysical survey
and trial trenching.
excavation
and recording: a controlled programme of fieldwork
to provide a lasting record of archaeological evidence unavoidably
destroyed by development
watching
brief: the recording of archaeological evidence
coming to light during the course of development . It is national
and local practice that the costs of archaeological work made
necessary by development should, in most circumstances, be borne by
the developer.
Further
information can be sought from the Leicestershire County Council’s
Historic and Natural Environment Team, click on this link to
take you the the Leicestershire County Council website.
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