Dig York An Archaeological Adventure | Jorvik Dig York | Here Come The Hoopers
Dig York An Archaeological Adventure | Jorvik Dig York | Here Come The Hoopers
After our Trip to the Jorvik Viking Centre, we continued on to the Jorvik Dig attraction also in York. The Attraction is an Archaeological Adventure. Where you get to learn more about what the Archaeologist get up to and what the discovered in York. How they can dig up artefacts and work out what they are and how they form a piece of Viking history.
Jorvik Dig is part of the PastPort deal and we bought the family pass for £55 for a family of 4.
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Description
Check out our Blog
here is a link to our review of Wonderlab at the Science Museum
Follow us on Twitter
Follow us on Instagram
Like us on Facebook
Bottle Digging UK 2018 - A EPIC DUMP DIG (The Yorkshire Digger)
A super but hard day's bottle digging. Things escalated pretty quickly and it turned into an epic day.
email : theyorkshiredigger@gmail.com
#theyorkshiredigger #no1metaldetectorist #no1bottledigger
DIG York Stadium Friends of York Archaeological Trust lunchtime lecture - Arran Johnson
Arran Johnson on the archaeology that was uncovered at the former York City Knights stadium in York.
York Trip//Jorvik//Dig
The loutubers visit York! Our first video - We hope you enjoy watching it as much as we enjoyed making it :D
England York p3 Jorvik Archeological Dig
At the Jorvik Dig museum in York, not to be confused with the main Jorvik museum. This was actually a great place to go, and would be a great place for both kids and adults. Here, I'm digging in a simulated archeological dig zone with some genuine Viking artifacts buried in rubber pellets.
York in 1978: Floods, Viking Dig and Folk
York folk act the Rit Fal Dals were recorded in 1978 at 16, Dove Street: the tape was lost for 40 years. Here's the band with views of York at that time: the Viking dig in Coppergate, the annual floods, the Barge at Skeldergate and derelict houses which now cost £300,000+.
Quick view of Hutments Dig near the Guildhall York
Quick view of Hutments Dig near the Guildhall York
England York p4 Jorvik Dig Viking Leather!
At another room in the Jorvik Dig museum, they let me touch a 1,000-year-old piece of leather and then show me a leather shoe sole of the same era.
York, UK
Jorvik, Viking Centre
The JORVIK penny and special edition coin (UK)
DIG York Stadium - A community excavation exploring York's Roman past
Dig York Stadium needs you!
Huntington Stadium, York, has played home to countless sporting events. The old ground has seen the triumphs and tribulations of York City Knights RLFC and the many achievements of the City of York Athletic Club. The story of the site however, goes back far further…
Throughout every night of floodlit drama, a secret has been hidden beneath the turf, a secret dating back to York’s very beginnings. This year, York Archaeological Trust aim to find out exactly what was happening here almost two millennia ago – and we want your help!
City of York Council and the York Archaeological Trust are holding a community archaeological dig as part of the York Community Stadium and Leisure Complex Project, which will deliver a new home for professional sport in the city.
Find out more:
Website:
Twitter: @digyorkstadium
Email: digyorkstadium@yorkat.co.uk
Tel.: +44 1904 663000
To keep updated with the latest from York Community Stadium, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook:
Website: yorkcommunitystadium.co.uk
Twitter: @yorkstadium
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Things to do in York with kids
A quick round up of our weekend in York. There are lots of things to do in York with kids. We visited the Jorvik Viking Centre, Dig, York Minster, the York Dungeons, the York Castle Museum, the Yorkshire Museum and Gardens and lots more using a York Pass from Visit York.
You can see my full post here:
I've also written about my top ten free things to do in York here:
Go on an Archaeological Adventure at DIG
Discover more about DIG - An Archaeological Adventure
What If You Dig a Tunnel Under the Ocean?
It takes approximately 8 hours and 15 minutes to get from London to New York by plane. If you choose to take a trip by ship, you'll spend almost a week in the ocean. But what about traveling a distance of 3,460 miles within an hour? Yup, a new type of transportation might appear in the world!
Futuristically fast trains that resemble transport capsules from sci-fi movies are supposed to move through low-pressure tunnels. Researchers from the USA and China are already working on this project. Some specialist are as optimistic as to predict the appearance of this new revolutionary type of transport in the next 10 years!
TIMESTAMPS:
The idea of “vacuum trains” 1:33
How does it work theoretically 2:21
What could make this type of transportation even faster 3:41
How to create such a construction 4:26
Can you drill the ocean floor? 4:42
Or can you leave the tunnel floating in the water? 6:14
Or could the tunnel lie on the ocean floor? 7:21
How much could the tunnel cost? 8:00
#moderntransportation #futureinventions #futuretechnology
Music by Epidemic Sound
SUMMARY:
- American engineer Robert Goddard created several prototypes of a vacuum train that could connect the biggest American cities. Since then, a lot of designers have been working on the implementation of this idea.
- According to Ernst G. Frankel, shipping expert and professor emeritus from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, such a vacuum tube may give us the advantage of high speeds.
- There must be huge pumps, approximately 30 miles apart, to help keep a near vacuum in the tunnel. The air leak would happen through the end stations.
- However, there's something that could make this type of transportation even faster: the combination of the vacuum train with another technology, for example, magnetic levitation.
- If you went for the first option, you’d have to drill the rock of the ocean floor. But the Atlantic Ocean is incredibly deep, and its average depth reaches 12,000 ft. You can imagine how huge the water pressure is at the bottom!
- The other way to build the tunnel is to leave it floating in the water. On the positive side, you wouldn't have to dig through thousands of miles of hard rock. Thus, this would take much less time.
- There is an option of building a tunnel that would lie on the ocean floor. But this alternative doesn't eliminate all the problems of the tunnel construction such as huge water pressure, big depths, and the difference of these depths.
- Whatever method of tunnel construction we choose, the biggest problem remains unsolved: the incredible cost of the tunnel. The total sum needed to finish the construction of the tunnel could hit $12 trillion!
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DIG TV Advert
At DIG, you get to discover the most exciting archaeological artefacts from the 2000 years of history that was hidden under the streets of York.
DIG - An Archaeological Adventure
What is DIG?
Owned by the same archaeologists who discovered the Viking-Age City and created JORVIK Viking Centre. DIG offers you a unique archaeological adventure to get you on your way to becoming a real archaeologist. This is a one of a kind! So…
DIG IT!
SHAKE IT!
SEE IT!
FEEL IT!
FIND IT!
“One of the best family days out. No other experience gets you as close to the excitement of archaeological discovery.” The One Show’s Dan Snow.
Metal Detecting UK Dig | 18 | UK TREASURE !! The Solo Searcher
Metal Detecting UK -
Dig | 18 Error from York Mint !!
▼▼▼ see more info / full description below ▼▼▼
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LAST HUNT ON THIS LAND FOR DECEMBER
Found a Rare Edward 1st Penny Class 9b2 1299-1301 with Mint Error EBIO
plus a very nice crotal and other cool stuff
Big Thankyou to @PhillyAdam on twitter for the coin information
Hope you enjoy the video as much as I did making it...
Equipment used
Metal Detector - Garrett AT Pro International
Pin Pointer - White's Bullseye TRX
Headphones - Clear Signal Denarius II
Trowel - Stainless Steel Evolution Extreme
Spade - Roughneck Mini Spade
Video Camera - Kodak Play Sport ZX5 Full HD
Check out my other Metal detecting videos
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check out this site if you are interested in subscribing to the metal detecting magazine in the uk which is out every month. you can do this online and if you are not in the uk as they do have an option for worldwide.
Also check out
they also publish a metal detecting magazine out each month which you can also get in the uk or worldwide
Archaeologists uncover 40,000 skeletons in U.K. railway dig
The largest archeological dig in British history is unearthing some incredible finds at a London railway station. Teams are making way for a new train line, and in the process will be tasked with clearing a burial site of some 40,000 bodies.
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UK ATM heist: gangsters dig 50-foot tunnel to steal ATM cash
Originally published on March 21, 2014
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A gang in the United Kingdom spent months digging a tunnel that connected to a mini-supermarket and have gotten away with tens of thousands of pounds after stealing an ATM, according to a report by the BBC.
The theft took place at a Tesco Express petrol station in Salford, an industrial city near Manchester on March 14. Staffers opening up the shop were stunned to find a hole in the ground connected to a 50 foot-long tunnel.
Police believe the thieves spent a long time plotting the crime, as the bridge was a complex structure, with its roof supported by the building's foundations. The robbers likely used pick axes and shovels to build the tunnel, which crosses over a wasteland. The debris was disposed of in a nearby canal.
Investigators believe the ATM heist may be linked to two others in the area by a gang known as Mole in the Wall. It was suspected the very same group was behind a similar plot in 2007. A 40-foot tunnel was built to break into an ATM inside a retail park in nearby Fallowfield, but the attempt was unsuccessful as electric workers discovered the semi-finished tunnel while laying wires.
Authorities have urged witnesses who may have seen suspicious-looking people possibly covered in soil to come forward and provide information.
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UK team to dig for missing spitfires
Members of a British team are getting ready to fly to Burma to search for MK14 Spitfires - believed to have been buried at the end of World War II.
York Archaeological Dig
Archaeology looks for buried evidence to find out what happened in the past, and how people lived and worked.
Harvey went to a dig in York for Apple Pi, to find out more about the work of archaeologists.