Viewing ancient archaeological sites on modern maps allows us to make powerful connections between the world we live in today and the lives of people who came before us. When you can see where a Roman road crosses your high street, or a Bronze Age burial mound lies just beyond a housing estate, history suddenly feels local, tangible—and real.
By anchoring these ancient features in the familiar geography of today, modern maps give context to the past. They reveal long-forgotten patterns of settlement, travel, and land use that still shape our environment, even if they’re no longer visible on the surface.
This perspective helps us understand how landscapes evolved, how natural features influenced human decisions, and how traces of our ancestors still lie embedded beneath the places we walk every day. It’s a reminder that history isn't something separate from us—it’s woven into the very ground beneath our feet.
Explore the map, and you’re not just looking at archaeology—you’re rediscovering the story of your landscape.