An archaeological dig in northern England shows iron and lead processing continued and even increased after the departure of the Romans
By Michael Marshall
11 September 2025
Archaeological excavations near Aldborough, UK, are helping us understand life after Roman occupation
R Ferraby & M.J. Millet
When the Roman Empire withdrew from Britain, the result was not chaos and economic collapse. The metals industry in what is now northern England continued and even expanded in the subsequent centuries, according to an archaeological record of pollution from metalworking.
“The argument has been that, with the disappearance of state apparatus and linked state transport systems, the regional economies collapse totally,” says Christopher Loveluck at the University of Nottingham in the UK. But that isn’t what the archaeology revealed. “We’re seeing an increase in metal pollution products.”
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Loveluck is part of a team that has excavated Roman remains from Aldborough in North Yorkshire, England. Under Roman rule, this town was called Isurium Brigantum, where metals like iron and lead were mined and processed.
The team found aerosol pollution from these metalworking operations had become trapped in the silt accumulating in an ancient riverbed at the archaeological site. By digging through the layers of sediment, the team was able to reconstruct how pollution levels varied between 345 and 1779 AD.
“They get this long chronology, so you really can trace the ups and the downs,” says Jane Kershaw at the University of Oxford, who wasn’t involved in the research but who has studied early medieval metal mining.