Roman industrial hub discovered on banks of River Wear

(durham.ac.uk)

64 points | by andsoitis 4 days ago ago

12 comments

  • mitthrowaway2 7 hours ago

    > OSL measures when minerals such as quartz were last exposed to sunlight. Over time, these minerals build up a tiny store of energy while buried. When stimulated with light or heat in the laboratory, the minerals release this energy as a faint glow, which tells experts how long they have been underground.

    Now that's just magic, plain and simple.

  • b112 7 hours ago

    Being it's the Romans, and there are a lot of years of Romans, wouldn't one expect such a hub...

    Every Wear?

    • scott_w 6 hours ago

      While I get what you're going for, unfortunately, the pronunciation of Wear means it doesn't work. The correct pronunciation is more like Whee-ah (sounds a little bit like wheel) as opposed to sounding like "where" ;-)

      • graemep 4 hours ago

        Near enough for a dad joke, and works perfectly visually (a bit like "there are 10 types of people - those who know binary and those who do not"). In fact I find your lack of appreciation of the humour a bit wearing, not to say wear-ed.

      • syspec 6 hours ago

        Still works, just Aussie

        • dkdbejwi383 4 hours ago

          The vowel/diphthong in wear (as in wearing a towel, rhymes with “care”, “there”) and Wear (homophone with weir, rhymes with “steer”, “near”) are not the same in Australian English.

          • syspec 3 hours ago

            I guess that's why it's called comedy.

        • c22 2 hours ago

          I was thinking Boston could pull it off.

      • nkrisc 4 hours ago

        So more like “weir”.

      • Kye 2 hours ago

        "Correct" is doing a lot of work there. Dialects are a thing. I have never heard anyone pronounce it like whee-ah. They would get a lot of chuckles here where it's pronounced the same as where.

        Whee-ah is a little emphasis away from sounding like a donkey.

  • 0x104-238FF 5 hours ago

    Architecture in ancient cities was subject to nature in rerum natura.

  • jstanley 7 hours ago

    For some reason I was expecting a large wheel hub.