The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK

Analysis of plant remains and soils collected during excavations of the Iron Age and Roman Period salt production site at Stanford Wharf Nature Reserve on the coast of Essex have shown that saltmarsh plants and adhering sediments had been used as fuel to evaporate brine and crystallise the sea salt....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Edward Biddulph
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2016-02-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10230
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849397191156695040
author Edward Biddulph
author_facet Edward Biddulph
author_sort Edward Biddulph
collection DOAJ
description Analysis of plant remains and soils collected during excavations of the Iron Age and Roman Period salt production site at Stanford Wharf Nature Reserve on the coast of Essex have shown that saltmarsh plants and adhering sediments had been used as fuel to evaporate brine and crystallise the sea salt. It was further suggested in report of the fieldwork (Biddulph et al. 2012) that the ash of the fuel was itself a useful by-product, being steeped in the brine to create a stronger solution. The idea was not tested at the time that the report was being prepared, but in this paper, I report on experiments designed to test that hypothesis. The results show that burnt samphire (representative of saltmarsh plants), when steeped in seawater, enhances the salinity of the water, resulting in a brine that is more concentrated than one created from seawater alone. What is more, given an equal volume of brine, the brine and ash solution yields a higher amount of salt than does the seawater-only brine. The experiments support the suggestion made in the Stanford Wharf report, and have implications for the understanding of coastal salt production in the Iron Age and Roman period.
format Article
id doaj-art-40d75c55deea4c379f2f7dc0930feaad
institution Kabale University
issn 2212-8956
language English
publishDate 2016-02-01
publisher EXARC
record_format Article
series EXARC Journal
spelling doaj-art-40d75c55deea4c379f2f7dc0930feaad2025-08-20T03:39:06ZengEXARCEXARC Journal2212-89562016-02-012016/1ark:/88735/10230The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UKEdward BiddulphAnalysis of plant remains and soils collected during excavations of the Iron Age and Roman Period salt production site at Stanford Wharf Nature Reserve on the coast of Essex have shown that saltmarsh plants and adhering sediments had been used as fuel to evaporate brine and crystallise the sea salt. It was further suggested in report of the fieldwork (Biddulph et al. 2012) that the ash of the fuel was itself a useful by-product, being steeped in the brine to create a stronger solution. The idea was not tested at the time that the report was being prepared, but in this paper, I report on experiments designed to test that hypothesis. The results show that burnt samphire (representative of saltmarsh plants), when steeped in seawater, enhances the salinity of the water, resulting in a brine that is more concentrated than one created from seawater alone. What is more, given an equal volume of brine, the brine and ash solution yields a higher amount of salt than does the seawater-only brine. The experiments support the suggestion made in the Stanford Wharf report, and have implications for the understanding of coastal salt production in the Iron Age and Roman period.https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10230saltexperimentiron ageroman eraunited kingdom
spellingShingle Edward Biddulph
The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
EXARC Journal
salt
experiment
iron age
roman era
united kingdom
title The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
title_full The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
title_fullStr The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
title_short The Role of Saltmarsh Plants in Iron Age and Roman Salt Production in the Thames Estuary, UK
title_sort role of saltmarsh plants in iron age and roman salt production in the thames estuary uk
topic salt
experiment
iron age
roman era
united kingdom
url https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10230
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardbiddulph theroleofsaltmarshplantsinironageandromansaltproductioninthethamesestuaryuk
AT edwardbiddulph roleofsaltmarshplantsinironageandromansaltproductioninthethamesestuaryuk