From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10507 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, January 11 2023 Volume 14 : Number 10507 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Like natureās Drano for your bowels? ["Avoid Constipation" Subject: Like natureās Drano for your bowels? Like naturebs Drano for your bowels? http://peakbiobooste.cyou/UexYGjks2zWYHcBpFx8I9EvlwzZrJF-X07umCUCc5gq2HoH15Q http://peakbiobooste.cyou/FgWL-GZ7JhUkr2qijRLkEORjuuTPsx6Ptf0SxkfHPRhyEnOFLA 1949 Reginald Musson excavated Combe Hill for the Eastbourne Natural History and Archaeological Society, to determine the accuracy of Curwen's plan. He began by opening the north end of a ditch on the west side (at the south end of trench 1 in the diagram). This trench was extended northwards, finding first a 3.7 m (4.0 yd) long causeway of unexcavated chalk, and then the southern end of the next ditch in the circuit. The ditch at the south end of trench 1 was about 0.9 m (1.0 yd) deep and yielded 912 sherds of Neolithic pottery and plentiful flint flakes; the one at the north end was only a foot deep and contained flints, but no pottery except a few fragments of early Iron Age and Romano-British pottery, just below the turf line. The causeway was cleared down to the chalk but there were no post-holes. Musson also investigated the bank of earth next to the ditch (trench 2 in the diagram), clearing an area 1.8 by 9 metres (2 by 10 yards) to search for post-holes, but none were found. The pottery found in the southern ditch was all identified as Ebbsfleet ware. It was not deposited at the bottom of the ditch; Musson's report shows a layer of silting below the layer containing pottery and flints, and Peter Drewett, an archaeologist who summarized Musson's work in a later review of the site, describes the pottery as a "dump", on top of a layer of "clean chalk rubble" a foot thick. Only five animal bones were found, four of ox and one from a pig. Charcoal fragments of ash, hawthorn and hazel were found; there was no ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10507 ***********************************************