Excavations revealed deep urban cultural layers—some of the earliest dating to the 920s–930s—and multi-layered wooden street pavements, which together enabled construction of an absolute dendrochronological timescale for the area. Researchers mapped several medieval homesteads (Estates A, B, and V) and traced the alignments of ancient streets, including Proboynaya (roughly modern Proletarskaya) and the east–west Chernitsyna and Ryaditina. The team also documented heavy disturbances from 16th–17th-century fortification works near the Novinsky bastion and the Okolny Gorod riverside wall, which removed upper horizons and backfilled them with gravel and sand.
Multiple birch bark letters in Old Novgorodian dialect were found at the site.
|
|