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| The deer footprints were made about 1,600 years ago [Credit: National Trust] |
Other finds include two 4th Century Roman coins and a bone pin, and more of a mosaic which was first unearthed during a dig last year.
Experts said they had also found evidence of an earlier villa, beneath the 4th Century one.
National Trust archaeologist Martin Papworth said the tile was found in the changing rooms of the late Roman baths.
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| Fragments of a floor mosaic have been discovered [Credit: National Trust] |
"The tilers used to lay their tiles out to dry when they made them out of clay before they fired them and made them vulnerable to any animals walking around to put their prints on them.
"This looks like perhaps a Roe deer walked across and mucked up the surface of the tile, but it's quite nice to see it."
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| One of the coins discovered dates to about AD330 to 340 [Credit: National Trust] |
"They had put concrete down in the 1960s to mark where walls had been found, and we expected there to be no mosaic there at all, but in the grassy islands between the concrete we found this amazing mosaic which had been missed in the 1960s.
"Now we know it was part of a great reception hall 18m (60ft) long by 6m (20ft) wide. It's really exciting. It's patchy, but there are some large parts of it [remaining]."
He added that one of the 4th Century coins featured a Chi-Rho early Christian symbol, and was likely to be from the first Christian Roman emperor Constantine the Great.
Source: BBC News Website [August 25, 2015]








