Individuals
4
A series of skulls from Ripple Road, Barking
4
3
In 1932, during housing developments, a Roman stone coffin was found at Ripple Road in Barking. The burials appeared to have been disturbed at some point in the distant past by grave robbers.
Christopher Hawkes, then Assistant Keeper in the Department of British and Medieval Antiquities at the British Museum, was called out to the site along with Miriam L Tildesley, an osteological researcher at the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS).
The teeth of these individuals show extensive wear of the enamel, indicative of a coarse diet that was typical during the Roman period.
The remains went to the RCS collections and were subsequently transferred to the Natural History Museum in the late 1940s.
An individual with dental wear of the enamel, a carious lesion and ante-mortem tooth loss.
Individual with dental wear of the enamel, a carious lesion and ante-mortem tooth loss
The London human remains collection have been digitised
If you would like to use any specimens for research, please get in touch
Access to some collections will be affected as we prepare for the move to our new collections, science and digitisation centre.
Scientists and collections management specialists can visit the collections and borrow specimens for research.
Our duty is to provide a safe and secure environment for all of our collections.