Skip to main content
MOLA Logo
  • Services
    • Guidance and pre-planning
      • Risk appraisal
      • Heritage statements
      • Heritage consents
      • Heritage management
      • Marine, coastal and intertidal
    • Assessments and survey
      • Desk based assessment
      • Environmental impact assessment
      • Evaluations
      • Geomatics
      • Geophysical and aerial survey
      • Geoarchaeology
    • Excavation and recording
      • Excavation
      • Historic building recording
      • Watching brief
    • Analysis and archiving
      • Environmental archaeology
      • Finds analysis
      • Osteoarchaeology
      • Conservation
      • Archives
      • Photography and graphics
    • Public impact and social value
      • Social value
      • Displays and exhibitions
      • School activities
      • Digital, audio and immersive media
      • Community digs
      • Public talks and tours
      • Press and PR management
      • Audience mapping
    • Commercial projects
    • Why choose us
  • Research
    • Research projects
    • Research partnerships
    • Publications
  • Discoveries
    • Commercial projects
      • A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet
      • 46-48 Park St, Southwark
      • South Marston
      • King's Place
    • Research projects
    • Blogs
  • Get involved
    • Thames Discovery Programme
      • About TDP
      • Research at TDP
      • Learning with TDP
      • TDP Young Archaeologists' Club
      • Visiting the foreshore
    • Events
    • IAA grants
      • Partnerships grants
      • Networking grants
      • Creative residencies
      • Policy shaping grants
      • Secondments
      • Business development grants
    • Training
  • Resources
    • Resources for archaeologists
    • Resources for researchers
    • Resources for kids
  • About us
    • News
    • Our People
    • Our story
      • History
      • Impact
      • Sustainability
      • Equality, diversity and inclusion
      • Awards and accreditations
    • Our offices
      • London
      • Northampton
      • Stansted
      • Basingstoke
    • Contact us
      • Press, filming and image licensing
    • Careers
Contact Shop

Search

Show me

Suggestions

Search results

Showing 429 results for Thames Discovery Programme

A person standing in between two tall shelves filled with archaeological archive shelves. They are pushing a trolley with two archive boxes on them.

Resources for researchers

Over 50 years of archaeological investigations for you to explore...

Read more

Riverstories: new voices for an old river

IAA Project type: Creative residency

Partner organisations: Nova New Opportunities and Story Jam

MOLA staff leading IAA grant: Dr Claire Harris

Individual partners: Matthew Barnett from Nova New Opportunities, Lucy Lill and Alys Torrance from Story Jam

Project aims

Participants will develop their knowledge and understanding of Iron Age archaeology through guided walks, object-based sessions, and virtual reality experiences.

They will learn new craft skills and explore their responses to the archaeology through storytelling workshops.

Audiences

  • Families who access Nova New Opportunities’ Family Programme.  
  • Sessions are aimed at Key Stage 2 (ages 7-11) children and their parents/guardians. 

Project plan

Riverstories will connect families with the rich prehistoric archaeology of the Thames, developing participants’ sense of place, time and identity. Participants will develop their skills and confidence to create and share their own narratives, bringing new voices to reshape and retell archaeological stories.

The project will consist of 6 day-long workshops.  

In the first workshop we will explore the project area and collect objects from the Thames foreshore. The introductory storytelling session will use the found objects to foster creativity, confidence, and listening. Participants will use their imaginations and develop the idea that an object can be a gateway to a whole world. 

The second workshop will be based around MOLA’s Virtual Reality (VR) roundhouse and will help participants to imagine themselves in the Iron Age. The storytelling activity will be based around the topic of home and draw on participant’s own experience of home and their exploration of the VR roundhouse. 

Workshops three and four will be based around Iron Age objects (finds and replicas) and will include a craft activity e.g. weaving, making a pot, making an iron age brooch. The storytelling sessions will be based around the objects and will encourage participants to examine objects carefully and imagine them being made and used. 

The fifth workshop will use images to help develop a sense of the wider Iron Age landscape outside of the roundhouse. The storytelling session will be based around exploring how life in the Iron Age may have sounded and smelt! 

In the final workshop participants will build on previous sessions to create their own story about Iron Age Britain. The final stories will be performed to the group. 

Read more
Citizan recording coastal erosion

Sustainability

For us, sustainability means meeting the needs of the present without preventing future generations from meeting theirs... 

Read more
Decorative image

TDP Young Archaeologists' Club

Do you have a budding archaeologist who wants to get hands on with real discoveries and artefacts? YAC is the place to be...

Read more
Decorative image

Things to know before joining a foreshore walk

Explore fascinating archaeology running through the heart of London, from prehistory to the present day and see the city from a very different perspective...

Read more
A temporary shelter in a wood filled with bluebells

Together we flourish

Towards the development of a healthy consciousness of ethnically diverse archaeology

Read more
HOLDING IMAGE

Training

Our award-winning training programmes teach you everything you need to know to work as a professional archaeologist...

Read more
Decorative image

Visiting the foreshore

Make sure you're safe and prepared when visiting the Thames foreshore...

Read more
A large group of archaeologists standing on a construction site. They are wearing hi-vis clothing and hard hats. The river Thames and canary wharf is in the background.

Why choose us

We have all the capacity, knowledge and experience you expect, plus so much more...

Read more

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page Previous
  • …
  • Page 33
  • Page 34
  • Page 35
  • Current page 36
C555028B-3765-4DDC-ADA1-31122F414E94 MOLA Logo An Un.titled Site
  • Careers
  • Sustainability
  • Equality, diversity and inclusion
  • SHEQ policies
  • Press, filming and image licensing
  • Awards and accreditations
  • Digital code of conduct
  • Services
  • Research
  • Discoveries
  • Get involved
  • Resources
  • About us

Contact us

  • Basingstoke
  • London
  • Northampton
  • Stansted

Follow us

MOLA on Facebook MOLA on Twitter MOLA on Instagram MOLA on Linkedin
Citizan Thames discovery logo
  • Accessibility
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Notice
  • Cookie Policy

© MOLA (Museum of London Archaeology) is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales with company registration number 07751831 and charity registration number 1143574.