1.8 Summary of Heritage Assets
1.8.1 Introduction 154. The planning policies listed in Section 1.3 aim to promote development proposals that will preserve, conserve and, where possible and appropriate, enhance the historic environment; and that will seek to avoid or mitigate against harm.
155.
In line with national and local planning policies, development proposals which have the potential to affect designated and non-designated heritage assets and their settings will be permitted only where it can be demonstrated, along with sufficient evidence, that the asset would be conserved and, where appropriate, enhanced.
156. A description of the significance of heritage assets directly affected by the proposed development, based on the current level of available information, is presented below in line with current planning policy (NPPF Ch.12 Para.128).
1.8.2 Known Heritage Assets within the Site
1.8.2.1 Designated Heritage Assets 157. No designated heritage assets fall within the Site area however as noted in Section 1.5.5 a number of hedgerows which may be considered to be historically important, as defined by the Hedgerow Regulations 1997 (amended 2002) are traversed by the scheme.
1.8.2.2 Non-designated Heritage Assets 158. There are 88 archaeological records from both the Suffolk HER and the previous RSK walkover survey that fall within the cable route corridor. While artefacts and scatters can indicate potential for a period they do not necessarily always imply a precise conjunction with the presence of buried archaeological remains. It should be noted that the level of precision in recorded findspots is likely to vary and within the ploughsoil finds will be displaced. There is the additional factors of isolated loss and the importation of spoil or other material into an area. In particular pottery and other ceramic material is often associated with the process of manuring during the medieval and post-medieval periods to enrich the soil.
159. Records within the Site include a number of Neolithic, Bronze and prehistoric findspots (WA101, 107, 249, 309, 324, 354, 377, 432, 433, 493, 505, 592) as well as Iron Age and Romano-British finds (WA145, 238, 238, 307, 363, 375, 380, 381, 403, 428, 432, 433, 461, 505, 530, 532, 539). The only confirmed site is that previously exposed for the Martlesham by-pass where four Neolithic pits (WA350) and an Iron Age pit (WA351) were discovered, there must be considered to be potential for
Preliminary Environmental Information April 2014
East Anglia THREE Offshore Windfarm Appendix 25.1: Potential Archaeological Receptors Page 42
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