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SUSTAINABILITY

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FEATURES<br />

clustered at the edges. So serious was<br />

the problem that the MOD assigned<br />

five million pounds to set up a task<br />

force that would build a series of stone<br />

tracks which removed a mass of heavy<br />

vehicle activity from the grassland.<br />

A new stone track near the Bulford Ranges © Wiltshire Council<br />

The first MOD archaeologist started in<br />

1996, primarily to cover Salisbury Plain<br />

inexorably shunting movement<br />

towards areas (and heritage) not<br />

previously disturbed. It took 36 hours<br />

for the exercise to pass through the<br />

wash-down!<br />

At a basic level the commandant was<br />

faced with large areas that needed<br />

rest and repair, but the broader debate<br />

concerned the future - what could<br />

be done to prevent a repeat of this<br />

threat to both heritage and training?<br />

The concept of ‘loading’ was much<br />

discussed. Westdown Camp staff felt<br />

the rigorous assessment of the level<br />

of training (the loading) that each<br />

area could support was critical, with<br />

groundwater levels dominating all. The<br />

Commandant would halt any exercise<br />

if ground conditions were poor.<br />

Two further concepts were examined.<br />

It was apparent that investment in<br />

infrastructure had been poor. Vehicle<br />

movement occurred along old<br />

farm-tracks or routes generated by<br />

repeated exercises. The second and<br />

related observation was that much<br />

vehicle movement was ‘administrative’;<br />

simply the need for a unit to get to<br />

an area assigned to it. This factor was<br />

exacerbated by the long narrow shape<br />

of the training area, and the need to<br />

minimise traffc through the villages<br />

This was not a ban on free movement<br />

across the area, simply a measure that<br />

removed unwarranted erosion. This<br />

process was capped in 2000 by the<br />

construction of the Southern Range<br />

Road, moving traffc harmlessly across<br />

Salisbury Plain West.<br />

As County Archaeologist I was<br />

privileged to have some involvement<br />

in these processes, convinced in<br />

hindsight that the bold decisions<br />

and commitment shown by a series<br />

of Commandants over the years is<br />

the reason that sites like Chisenbury<br />

Warren survive today. I recall an<br />

incident when a squadron of tracked<br />

vehicles broke through the wire at<br />

that site. Seeing the evidence HQ<br />

staff expressed deep concern but I<br />

reminded them that this was only the<br />

fourth such event in 15 years, surely a<br />

mark of success, not failure. I think they<br />

took my point.<br />

Roy Canham MBE<br />

County Archaeologist (Retd) and<br />

Subgroup Leader<br />

Imber Conservation Group<br />

Chisenbury Warren Roman village, showing the network of new tracks designed to steer vehicles around the earthworks © Wiltshire Council<br />

Sanctuary 44 • 2015<br />

27

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