Jacqui Wood Explained

Jacqui Wood (born 4 January 1950) is a British experimental archaeologist and writer, specialising in the daily life of prehistoric Europeans.

As of 2001, she is director of Saveock Water Archaeology, and also the director and founder of Cornwall Celtic Village, a reconstructed Bronze to Iron Age settlement, at Saveock.[1] [2]

Wood was a member of the National Education Committee of the Council for British Archaeology (CBA) for three years, and secretary of the CBA for the south west region for another three years. As of 1995, she was a member of the General Committee of the Cornwall Archaeological Society and consultant to the Eden Project in Cornwall.

Wood has published papers in archaeology journals and conferences, and given lectures. She has also appeared on TV programmes about prehistoric dwellings and cooking, including episode 8 of series 11 of Time Team.And the Great British Baking Show season 1 episode 3.She has also given demonstrations of Bronze Age technology for English Heritage, researched the grass cloak of Ötzi the Iceman, as well as his shoes (which she believes are actually snowshoes), and made replicas of them for the Bolzano museum devoted to the mummy. She also made a replica of the Orkney Hood (Britain's oldest textile) for the Orkney Council, and replicas of various prehistoric dwellings.[3] She has published on food history.[4]

Wood has excavated a site at Saveock Water which she has interpreted as evidence of early modern witchcraft.[5] [6]

She has written two fantasy novels set in prehistory, Cliff Dreamers and Return to the Temple of the Mother.[7]

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Notes and References

  1. Copley . Jon . Burning question . New Scientist . 28 November 1998 . 3 October 2020.
  2. News: Stringer . John . Bronze is back . 3 October 2020 . Times Educational Supplement . 22 June 2001.
  3. News: Aiano . Lynda . Touching the past . 3 October 2020 . Frontiers Magazine . 30 June 2013.
  4. News: Hickman . Leo . British food from the past . 3 October 2020 . The Guardian . 19 November 2009.
  5. Ravilious . Kate . Witches of Cornwall . Archaeology . 2008 . 61 . 6 . 3 October 2020.
  6. Book: Robin Melrose. Magic in Britain: A History of Medieval and Earlier Practices. 3 October 2020. 12 March 2018. McFarland. 978-1-4766-7400-1. 232–.
  7. News: £10,000 Cornish treasure hunt . 3 October 2020 . Cornish Times . 17 April 2017.