Beyond the Classroom.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night- Only Connect Time A Beautiful Mind (PG-13) Fermat’s Last Theorem Hidden Figures (PG) Professor Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Imitation Game (12) Curiosities Youtube channel: numberphile The Simpsons and Their Mathematical Secrets Problem solving, Break out Logic Escape Room Reasoning skills Bad Science – Ben Goldacre Horizon Documentaries on BBC Your body, the fish that evolved – Keith Harrison The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures Storm in a Teacup – Helen Czerski The Island (12) Wonders of the Solar System – Brian Cox An inconvenient truth National Geographic magazine Chester Zoo Observation – what is around you? Why do people act in a certain way? Edinburgh Zoo to see pandas. Questioning – why do things happen? Museum of Natural history or How are things made? Science Museum London Survey- birds in your garden, creatures Jodrell Bank under a rock, stars in the sky. Sea Life Center Museum of Science and History (MOSI) Adaptations of the set literature texts to improve knowledge on plot and Anything you enjoy. character. Broadsheet Newspaper articles Any poems by Lemn Sissay on youtube. In particular ‘Inspire and Be Inspired’ Short stories or collections of poetry Books/screenplays that have been adapted Any poems by Longfella (Tony Walsh) into films. found on youtube. In particular ‘This is the place’. John Rylands library How to communicate confidently Local libraries and central library and effectively in a number of different scenarios and contexts. Coffee Shops and Cafes Improve your vocabulary Areas which inspired your favourite books/stories. Reading a range of texts Globe theatre in London. Skimming and scanning News Trash [15] Trash – Andy Mulligan Blood Diamond [15] Prisoners of Geography [GCSE] Human Planet Horrible Geography series Blue Planet San Andreas [12] Deepwater Horizon [12] Manchester Museum Geocaching to practice map skills National parks Castleton General geographical knowledge of people and places – where places are, Blue Planet aquarium what is happening in the world around us. Research your ancestry. Animal Farm by George Orwell Hitler: The Rise of Evil (12) The Butter Battle Book by Dr. Seuss Current Affairs and News. Analyse a range of political changes and ideas. The Manchester Museum Imperial War Museum North Research the history of the area where you live. Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Tron (PG) Hardware and Software by Charles Petzold Hackers (12) GCSE Computer Science OCR Revision Guide - Matrix (15) for the Grade 9-1 Course Python: For Beginners: A Crash Course Guide To Learn Python in 1 Week Paperback – 21 Sep 2017 The Air Radar Defence Museum occupies the site of the world’s longest, continuously operating radar installation. Air Radar Defence Museum, Norfolk The National Museum of Computing, Milton Keynes Bletchley Park The National Museum of Computing History keeps the bits and bytes of old computers alive while celebrating those no longer with us. Explore, experience and enjoy the once top-secret world of iconic Codebreaking Huts and atmospheric Victorian estate. Business Monthly The apprentice/Dragons Den National Newspapers Peter Jones: how I made my millions. The founder (12) Cadburys world Develop teamwork by working collaboratively on a project with friends. Museum of Science and Industry to see early forms of ICT. Develop your ICT skills by using key software such as office. Design Manchester Festival (designmcr.com) An actor prepares by Constantin The story of musicals (youtube) Stanislavski. Frantic Assembly National Theatre – Education Links Brecht on theatre Translated by John Splendid Theatre Company Willett. Kneehigh Theatre Company The Blue Man Group So you want to be a theatre producer – James Seabright One of Manchester’s Many Theatres. Confidence in speaking and communication. Royal Exchange Contact Theatre A range of postures gestures and body The Palace Theatre language. Z-d Arts Theatre Dunham Massy Working collaboratively with people Eat to Live- Joel Fuhrman Rambert Dance Co. -James Cousins Conditioning for Dance – Eric Franklin -StopGap -Hofesh Schecter -Matthew Bourne A choreographers handbook – Jonathan Burrows All available on you tube. First position (U) Lowry Theatre Dance appreciation skills Z-Arts Performance skills Dance House Technical and physical dance skills Contact Theatre Royal Exchange Dance Manchester French Comics War of the buttons (PG-13) Le Diner de cons (15) Asterix Tintin “le hit parade” Home Cinema show great French films. The Christmas markets are a great place to try out a European language and sample to cuisine. Keys to drawing Banksy Documentary: exit through the gift Bert Dodson shop (15) Saving Mr. Banks (U) The Creative Family Amanda Blake Soule Manchester Art Gallery Observational Drawings Whitworth Art gallery Look at the world through the eyes of an artist, Art is everywhere in everything that has been designed or created. Beginners photography guide. National Geographic: the life of a photographer. The art of photography Lowry Gallery Think like a photojournalist. Take Manchester Art Gallery pictures of what you see and what Imperial War Museum North interests you. Steve Jobs Biography- Walter Issacson On TV Inside the Factory, Robot Wars, Bake off The design of everyday things – Donald Norman Films Wall- E (U), Hugo (U), The crafters book of clever ideas – Cliff and Andrea Currie Restaurants from a range of cuisines. Look at civil engineering, how is Manchester City Center designed to work? Theme Parks to see more interesting forms of engineering. How are rollercoasters designed? What are the benefit of green spaces in the city center? What impact will HS2 have? Quarry Bank mill to see how engineering has shaped the history of Manchester. Learn a new craft hobby? Sewing, Cooking, Manufacturing? High Fidelity (15) – Nick Hornby Glastonbury Footage on BBC Control (15) Wouldn’t It Be Nice: My own story Brian Whiplash (15) Wilson This is Your Brain on Music – Daniel J. Levitin Go to a concert! Especially if there is a Participate in music workshops, for performance by an artist or group who example there are free workshops at Z perform in a genre you are studying Arts or the Contact Theatre Visit the RNCM and watch one of their free Challenge yourself to listen to a piece of lunchtime concerts classical music every day and try to work out the instruments you can hear and any key musical elements (e.g. playing Any up and coming gigs at Manchester techniques and dynamics) Academy, Apollo, etc Newspapers. National News bulletins. Follow journalists on Twitter. Local News Bulletins. NME. The Social Network (12a). The Circle (12) Amy (15) Anchorman (12a) Take the BBC tour at media city. Question everything you are told on Social Media. Recognise Fake News. Create your own Vlog. Editing. Jenson Button – life to the limit Match of the Day analysis. Fred Perry: British Tennis Legend New sports that you haven’t taken part in yourself. Bradley Wiggins – My time Winter & Summer Olympics. Alex Ferguson – my autobiography Local gym is the best way to Analysis of performance. learn. Methods of training. Any sporting fixture. How to outwit an opponent. Swimming baths. Longford athletics club. Any sports club! .
Recommended publications
  • A Liveable and Low-Carbon City

    A Liveable and Low-Carbon City

    A liveable and low-carbon city Chapter 5: A liveable and low-carbon city Strategic overview ambition to become zero-carbon by 2038. Other programmes and continued investment into environmental factors also remain a priority voluntary and community-sector funding. The Our Manchester Strategy set out the for the city. These include developing our green vision for Manchester to ‘be in the top flight infrastructure, repurposing our contaminated Manchester is growing and becoming ever-more of world-class cities by 2025’ and committed land (a by-product of our industrial heritage), diverse. We are a welcoming city, and residents the city to ‘playing its full part in limiting the improving air quality, increasing recycling and have a proud track record of positive integration impacts of climate change’. The future success reducing the amount of waste that goes to and respecting one another’s cultures, of Manchester is inextricably tied to whether landfill, making sure our streets are clean and faiths and ways of life. We want Manchester it is a great place to live. litter-free, and reducing the amount of fly-tipping. people to be proud of their institutions, their neighbourhood, and their city, which will This chapter provides a detailed analysis of This chapter will also focus on some of the reflect and celebrate this diversity. the local housing market and how the city is Community Safety issues that have a direct addressing issues by developing a diverse supply and significant impact on residents, visitors This chapter outlines how progress is being of good-quality housing available to rent and and people working in this city.
  • The Factory, Manchester

    The Factory, Manchester

    THE FACTORY, MANCHESTER The Factory is where the art of the future will be made. Designed by leading international architectural practice OMA, The Factory will combine digital capability, hyper-flexibility and wide open space, encouraging artists to collaborate in new ways, and imagine the previously unimagined. It will be a new kind of large-scale venue that combines the extraordinary creative vision of Manchester International Festival (MIF) with the partnerships, production capacity and technical sophistication to present innovative contemporary work year-round as a genuine cultural counterweight to London. It is scheduled to open in the second half of 2019. The Factory will be a building capable of making and presenting the widest range of art forms and culture plus a rich variety of technologies: film, TV, media, VR, live relays, and the connections between all of these – all under one roof. With a total floor space in excess of 15,000 square meters, high-spec tech throughout, and very flexible seating options, The Factory will be a space large enough and adaptable enough to allow more than one new work of significant scale to be shown and/or created at the same time, accommodating combined audiences of up to 7000. It will be able to operate as an 1800 seat theatre space as well as a 5,000 capacity warehouse for immersive, flexible use - with the option for these elements to be used together, or separately, with advanced acoustic separation. It will be a laboratory as much as a showcase, a training ground as well as a destination. Artists and companies from across the globe, as well as from Manchester, will see it as the place where they can explore and realise dream projects that might never come to fruition elsewhere.
  • CV—Alpesh K. Patel/ Page 1 of 6

    CV—Alpesh K. Patel/ Page 1 of 6

    ALPESH KANTILAL PATEL CURRICULUM VITAE EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER, Manchester, England PhD in ART HISTORY AND VISUAL STUDIES, April 2009 Dissertation: “Queer Desi Visual Culture across the Brown Atlantic (US/UK)” MPHIL in DRAMA/SCREEN STUDIES (upgraded to PHD in 2006) YALE UNIVERSITY, New Haven, Connecticut BA in HISTORY OF ART with distinction in major, September 1997 ACADEMIC POSITIONS FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY, Miami, FL Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art and Theory, August 2011-present Director, Master in Fine Arts in Visual Arts, July 2012-present NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, New York, NY, Fall 2010-Spring 2011 Visiting Scholar, Center for Study of Gender and Sexuality FELLOWSHIPS, SCHOLARSHIPS, BURSARIES, STUDENTSHIPS, GRANTS, AND OTHER HONORS NATIONAL ENDOWMENT OF ARTS SUMMER INSTITUTE: Re-envisioning American Art History: Asian American Art, Research, and Teaching at Asian/Pacific/American Institute at New York University, July 2012 CITY OF MIAMI BEACH CULTURAL ARTS COUNCIL, Junior Anchor Grant to develop year-round programming for Miami Beach Urban Studios (MBUS), October 2012. $30,000 with matching grant FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY, Office of Engaged Creativity Grant, 2011-12 COLLEGE ART ASSOCIATION (CAA), Professional Development Fellowship, finalist, 2008 HIGHER EDUCATION FUNDING COUNCIL FOR ENGLAND (HEFCE), Overseas Research Studentship, 2006-8 UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER SCHOOL OF ARTS, HISTORIES AND CULTURES Skills Awareness for Graduate Education (SAGE) grant, to fund organization of postgraduate conference,
  • Leading Artists Commissioned for Manchester International Festival

    Leading Artists Commissioned for Manchester International Festival

    Press Release LEADING ARTISTS COMMISSIONED FOR MANCHESTER INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL High-res images are available to download via: https://press.mif.co.uk/ New commissions by Forensic Architecture, Laure Prouvost, Deborah Warner, Hans Ulrich Obrist with Lemn Sissay, Ibrahim Mahama, Kemang Wa Lehulere, Rashid Rana, Cephas Williams, Marta Minujín and Christine Sun Kim were announced today as part of the programme for Manchester International Festival 2021. MIF21 returns from 1-18 July with a programme of original new work by artists from all over the world. Events will take place safely in indoor and outdoor locations across Greater Manchester, including the first ever work on the construction site of The Factory, the world-class arts space that will be MIF’s future home. A rich online offer will provide a window into the Festival wherever audiences are, including livestreams and work created especially for the digital realm. Highlights of the programme include: a major exhibition to mark the 10th anniversary of Forensic Architecture; a new collaboration between Hans Ulrich Obrist and Lemn Sissay exploring the poet as artist and the artist as poet; Cephas Williams’ Portrait of Black Britain; Deborah Warner’s sound and light installation Arcadia allows the first access to The Factory site; and a new commission by Laure Prouvost for the redeveloped Manchester Jewish Museum site. Manchester International Festival Artistic Director & Chief Executive, John McGrath says: “MIF has always been a Festival like no other – with almost all the work being created especially for us in the months and years leading up to each Festival edition. But who would have guessed two years ago what a changed world the artists making work for our 2021 Festival would be working in?” “I am delighted to be revealing the projects that we will be presenting from 1-18 July this year – a truly international programme of work made in the heat of the past year and a vibrant response to our times.
  • A History of the University of Manchester Since 1951

    A History of the University of Manchester Since 1951

    Pullan2004jkt 10/2/03 2:43 PM Page 1 University ofManchester A history ofthe HIS IS THE SECOND VOLUME of a history of the University of Manchester since 1951. It spans seventeen critical years in T which public funding was contracting, student grants were diminishing, instructions from the government and the University Grants Commission were multiplying, and universities feared for their reputation in the public eye. It provides a frank account of the University’s struggle against these difficulties and its efforts to prove the value of university education to society and the economy. This volume describes and analyses not only academic developments and changes in the structure and finances of the University, but the opinions and social and political lives of the staff and their students as well. It also examines the controversies of the 1970s and 1980s over such issues as feminism, free speech, ethical investment, academic freedom and the quest for efficient management. The author draws on official records, staff and student newspapers, and personal interviews with people who experienced the University in very 1973–90 different ways. With its wide range of academic interests and large student population, the University of Manchester was the biggest unitary university in the country, and its history illustrates the problems faced by almost all British universities. The book will appeal to past and present staff of the University and its alumni, and to anyone interested in the debates surrounding higher with MicheleAbendstern Brian Pullan education in the late twentieth century. A history of the University of Manchester 1951–73 by Brian Pullan with Michele Abendstern is also available from Manchester University Press.
  • Manchester Royal Opera House Proposal Update

    Manchester Royal Opera House Proposal Update

    Manchester City Council Item 7 Executive 17 December 2008 Manchester City Council Report for Resolution Report To: Executive – 17 December 2008 Subject: Update on the Royal Opera House Manchester proposal. Report of: Chief Executive Summary This report updates members on the progress of the proposal to establish a base in Manchester for the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet, including seeking approval to feasibility funding for the development of the project. If successful, the project would deliver an expanded and significantly developed performance base venue at the Palace Theatre. In addition to making a major contribution to the cultural provision in the north of England, ROHM will also deliver a word class centre for education and skills, along with a significant economic impact to the sub regional economy. Recommendations o To note the progress of discussions with the Royal Opera House since the previous verbal update at the March Executive Committee Meeting. o To note that feasibility funding of up to £100k will be required over financial years 2008/09 and 2009/10, to develop the project to the next stage subject to government approval. o To request that a further report be brought to the Executive in March 2009. Wards Affected: All Wards Community Strategy Spine Summary of the contribution to the strategy Performance of the economy The ROHM project would be a significant generator of of the region and sub region increased expenditure in the City Centre and is anticipated to be able to deliver an additional 500 fte jobs. Manchester City Council Item 7 Executive 17 December 2008 Reaching full potential in One of the key drivers to this project is to develop a education and employment production centre that places learning and skills at the heart of the operation.
  • Greater Manchester Culture and Social Impact Fund Committee 2020/21

    Greater Manchester Culture and Social Impact Fund Committee 2020/21

    Public Document GREATER MANCHESTER CULTURE AND SOCIAL IMPACT FUND COMMITTEE 2020/21 DATE: Monday 19 April 2021 TIME: 11.00 am This meeting will be accessible from 10.30 am. Please could Members join the meeting early so any IT issues can be addressed. VENUE: Live Teams Virtual Meeting AGENDA 1. APOLOGIES 2. CHAIRS ANNOUNCEMENTS AND URGENT BUSINESS 3. DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST 1 - 4 To receive declarations of interest in any item for discussion at the meeting. A blank form for declaring interests has been circulated with the agenda; please ensure that this is returned to the Governance & Scrutiny Officer at the start of the meeting 4. TO APPROVE THE MINUTES OF THE LAST MEETING HELD 5 - 10 ON 3 SEPTEMBER 2020 5. GM CULTURE RECOVERY PLAN & YEAR IN REVIEW 11 - 54 6. DATE AND TIMES OF FUTURE MEETINGS That meetings be organised in accordance with the Committee’s Terms of Reference (at least twice a year) and circulated to Members. It is suggested that the next meeting take place in September 2021 when District representatives have been appointed. BOLTON MANCHESTER ROCHDALE STOCKPORT TRAFFORD BURY OLDHAM SALFORD TAMESIDE WIGAN Please note that this meeting will be livestreamed via www.greatermanchester-ca.gov.uk, please speak to a Governance Officer before the meeting should you not wish to consent to being included in this recording. For copies of papers and further information on this meeting please refer to the website www.greatermanchester-ca.gov.uk. Alternatively, contact the following Governance & Scrutiny Officer: Jenny Hollamby [email protected] This agenda was issued on 9 April 2021 on behalf of Julie Connor, Secretary to the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, Broadhurst House, 56 Oxford Street, Manchester M1 6EU 2 GM CULTURE AND SOCIAL IMPACT FUND COMMITTEE 2020/21 19 March 2021 Declaration of Councillors’ Interests in Items Appearing on the Agenda NAME: ______________________________ DATE: _______________________________ Minute Item No.
  • A History of the University of Manchester Since 1951

    A History of the University of Manchester Since 1951

    Pullan2004jkt 10/2/03 2:43 PM Page 1 University ofManchester A history ofthe HIS IS THE SECOND VOLUME of a history of the University of Manchester since 1951. It spans seventeen critical years in T which public funding was contracting, student grants were diminishing, instructions from the government and the University Grants Commission were multiplying, and universities feared for their reputation in the public eye. It provides a frank account of the University’s struggle against these difficulties and its efforts to prove the value of university education to society and the economy. This volume describes and analyses not only academic developments and changes in the structure and finances of the University, but the opinions and social and political lives of the staff and their students as well. It also examines the controversies of the 1970s and 1980s over such issues as feminism, free speech, ethical investment, academic freedom and the quest for efficient management. The author draws on official records, staff and student newspapers, and personal interviews with people who experienced the University in very 1973–90 different ways. With its wide range of academic interests and large student population, the University of Manchester was the biggest unitary university in the country, and its history illustrates the problems faced by almost all British universities. The book will appeal to past and present staff of the University and its alumni, and to anyone interested in the debates surrounding higher with MicheleAbendstern Brian Pullan education in the late twentieth century. A history of the University of Manchester 1951–73 by Brian Pullan with Michele Abendstern is also available from Manchester University Press.
  • Audiences and Participants: Researching Theatre Users at Contact, Manchester

    Audiences and Participants: Researching Theatre Users at Contact, Manchester

    Audiences and Participants: Researching Theatre Users at Contact, Manchester A thesis submitted to The University of Manchester for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities 2012 Uwe Gröschel School of Arts, Languages and Cultures LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ................................................................................................ 4 LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................ 5 LIST OF TABLES .............................................................................................................. 6 ABSTRACT ..................................................................................................................... 7 DECLARATION................................................................................................................ 8 COPYRIGHT STATEMENT ................................................................................................ 9 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................ 10 THE AUTHOR ............................................................................................................... 11 PART 1 ......................................................................................................................... 12 1 CHAPTER 1 - AN INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCHING NEW THEATRE PARADIGMS ... 12 1.1 AIMS .........................................................................................................................
  • 1-88533819.Pdf

    1-88533819.Pdf

    A PLACE TO ENABLE THE EXTRAORDINARY Pictured: Arial view of Oxford Road Corridor Welcome to Oxford Road Corridor, Manchester's innovation district. A hub of scientific research, discovery and advancement; home to a growing, thriving community of institutions, students and professionals. At the heart of the district is Circle Square, a brand new city neighbourhood. A place where entrepreneurs work alongside great artists, great scientists and technologists, and your neighbours are innovators and creators. This is the place that enables the extraordinary. Pictured: Oxford Road Corridor 01 Eat, sleep, drink, repeat Oxford Road Corridor's incredible food scene is constantly growing 02 Culture Creative energy flows through these city streets 04 Circle Square A new city neighbourhood arriving summer 2020 03 A place for the curious and the clever Knowledge is at the heart of Oxford Road Corridor EAT, SLEEP, DRINK, REPEAT "The reputation of the Manchester food scene has grown at an incredible rate, with 150,000 people working and studying here, the pent up demand for retail and leisure on Oxford Road Corridor is enormous. The area is currently underprovided for in this respect, but that is definitely poised to change... it's a very exciting time for the district." 9 Thom Hetherington, Pictured: Spoken word event at Hatch CEO, Northern Restaurant & Bar Show Pictured from left to right: Mark Ronson DJ'ing at The Refuge; The Refuge courtyard 10 Hatch is a striking new Öl addition to Oxford Road's Scandinavian concept nano-brewery and bar, Öl, is thriving cultural scene. a craft beer haven bringing a welcome selection of original, inventive own house brews and flavours to this part of Located at Circle Square, Hatch is home town.
  • 18 Extraordinary Days of World Premieres and Special Events

    18 Extraordinary Days of World Premieres and Special Events

    1 page 48 Get involved 18 EXTRAORDINARY Take part in a show / Develop your talent / Join our creative community page 48 DAYS OF WORLD page 48 Become an MIF Member Priority booking / Festival Square PREMIERES AND Free gift / Special offers / The home of MIF Discounts in Festival Square / Exclusive invites SPECIAL EVENTS page 56 Interdependence Talks & discussions page 8 page 16 page 43 page 21 page 46 Experience online Access MIF19 opening event Live streams / Immersive Access performances / (AR/VR) / Podcasts / Venue access / Join Films / Long reads our access mailing list mif.co.uk/viewpoints page 54 #MIF19 Essentials mcrintfestival Book tickets / Plan your visit / Venue page 4 mifestival directory / Complete mifestival Festival calendar page 32 page 40 Book tickets at mif.co.uk manchesterintfest page 50 YOKO ONO WORLD PREMIERE Yoko Ono invites the people of Manchester to Cathedral Gardens gather together in Cathedral Gardens and send Thur 4 July, 6pm a message of peace to the world. Join thousands of diverse voices and a people’s orchestra of bells Admission free from home and abroad as the city rings and sings out for peace – and welcomes the world to Manchester. Watch live online mif.co.uk/live Yoko Ono has been among the world’s most #BELLSFORPEACE renowned and respected artists for more than 50 years. This new commission is the first major Get involved work she has created for the city of Manchester. Visit mif.co.uk/ getinvolved or email [email protected] Commissioned and produced by Manchester International Festival. Supported by Paul Hamlyn Foundation as part of My Festival.
  • NEW ISLINGTON WHARF, ANCOATS, MANCHESTER Greater Manchester

    NEW ISLINGTON WHARF, ANCOATS, MANCHESTER Greater Manchester

    NEW ISLINGTON WHARF, ANCOATS, MANCHESTER Greater Manchester Archaeological Investigation Oxford Archaeology North November 2005 CgMs Issue No: 2005-06/455 OA North Job No: L9605 NGR: SJ 8530 9825 Document Title: NEW ISLINGTON WHARF, ANCOATS, MANCHESTER Document Type: Archaeological Investigation Client Name: CgMs Issue Number: 2005-06/455 OA Job Number: L9605 National Grid Reference: SJ 8530 9825 Prepared by: Sean McPhillips Position: Project Officer Date: November 2005 Checked by: Ian Miller Signed……………………. Position: Senior Project Manager Date: November 2005 Approved by: Alan Lupton Signed……………………. Position: Operations Manager Date: November 2005 Document File Location Wilm/Projects/L9605/Moore’s Mill/Report Oxford Archaeology North © Oxford Archaeological Unit Ltd 2005 Storey Institute Janus House Meeting House Lane Osney Mead Lancaster Oxford LA1 1TF OX2 0EA t: (0044) 01524 848666 t: (0044) 01865 263800 f: (0044) 01524 848606 f: (0044) 01865 793496 w: www.oxfordarch.co.uk e: [email protected] Oxford Archaeological Unit Limited is a Registered Charity No: 285627 Disclaimer: This document has been prepared for the titled project or named part thereof and should not be relied upon or used for any other project without an independent check being carried out as to its suitability and prior written authority of Oxford Archaeology being obtained. Oxford Archaeology accepts no responsibility or liability for the consequences of this document being used for a purpose other than the purposes for which it was commissioned. Any person/party using or relying on the document for such other purposes agrees, and will by such use or reliance be taken to confirm their agreement to indemnify Oxford Archaeology for all loss or damage resulting therefrom.