 Ddodd, dyma'r Joana. Mae'n gweithio'r unig o'r Unedig ysgolion Saint Andrews, a mae'n gymhreithio, mae'n gweithio, a'n gweithio'r Archeolegau Sgolwyr. Mae'r cyfnod pobl yn ymgyrch yn ymddi'r gweithio'r gweithio. Mae'n gweithio'r cyfnod, mae'n gweithio'r 19th yma. So, mae'n gweithio'r cyfnod o'r Olyaf sydd yn ymgyrch yn Ysgolion Sgolwyr, ond mae'n gweithio'r amser yn ymgyrch yn ymgyrch. Mae'n golygu. Mae'n gweithio ar eu cyflwyno a'n gwybod ar y cyflwyno'r bobl yn ymgyrch. Mae'n gweithio'r Archeolegau Sgolwyr. Mae'n gweithio'r unrhyw hyd yn unig. Mae'n gweithio'r unrhyw hir ymgyrch. Mae'n gweithio'r unrhyw hwn am yw, mae'n gweithio ar y brifloedd. Felly mae'n rhoi elu i'r rhoploedd neu phobl... ...dyn ni'nieu i'r byw, i'r byw nawr, i'w gwybod gyda cherdd ... ... ac yna wneud arweithio bwyl yn cael ei wneud atriffyn... ...mwyafolodd arniidd bwysigol arwyd. Felly mae'n gweld ei wneud arwyddiol yr hollol.... ...wyafolodd ar wneud o'r boblio sydd wedi'u ffordd o'r fanyddol. Fe gydur i fwyafr fricku ynguishid... ...o'r hollol ei wneud am dd Pakasol... ...y gyda fyddiol i'r hayfod yw... i cyfan i gael, yn digwch yn ysgrifftau those, ac eich gair ysgrifftau hyn o fewn dda i'r gael gyfoesence hirach. A gweithio'r ffilm sydd yng Nghymru a i chi gyfrifio'r ffilm sy'n ei chyfen i'r ffwrdd a ffawr yn gyfawr. Dwi'n dechrau itfau i gael y pethau. O'ch pethau yma, wedi 2012 a 2016, ddwy'r ffon o wneud cyfraffyniadau mewn ysgrifftau ac yn ysgrifennid gwerthul achden i'u gynhyrchu i'r brifysig yn sgolennu? Yn yn cael ei dewis arweinydd dros y gynhyrchu gyda, y llwyth canwydig cyngor, mae'r dynnu arweinydd yn ddigon hwnnw'r sector yn Sgolennu felly'r Ymbriddurol, Yeffyd, Alicazau, ac Reifarchwyr. Yn ei unrhyw o'r gwybwch sy'n arddangos galw yr ystod o gyrgyffr, mae'r gwerthul yn再 awgdd ychynig o'r byd yn cyffredigol bwysig yn y ddaint data collected mostly by volunteers and this opens up the potential of using coastal heritage data in climate change research so that's where we're going. This is a really important research outcome and it was enabled by the knowledge and capacity brought to the project by volunteers. We work with heritage, this is being lost but we see this as an opportunity for learning and enjoyment and for benefits in society today and we're not about preservation, we're about opportunity. Each one of these projects on the screen was nominated and brought to us by volunteer or by member of the public and some of them are quite ambitious and they're all volunteer led projects so this has resulted in a great body of case studies of positive responses to loss of heritage which can be used by others as inspiration. Our network of trained volunteers are embedded in local communities across Scotland and so this creates a legacy of stewardship for coastal heritage which is really important for coastal management, sustainable coastal management and the impact of volunteers is particularly felt in the data collection and the taking action which drives the heritage management cycle. So to conclude I would like you to hear for yourself some of the varied impacts expressed by our volunteers as a result of their involvement in coastal heritage risk in Scotland and hopefully this will work. Just in two slides, enthusiasm and passion for actuality and I wish I was younger and I would have done it longer. This is going to be interesting but as I go into it it's quite fun. I think it's going to be a community on board because there are people who are around to see the changes that occur and hopefully record what's happening and take photographs and keep an eye on things. It's got me out really looking at my local coastline and I really value that. It was quite a good way to learn some skills and techniques that was one of the cool things that I learned from charters of the RTI imagery and the photographic techniques I've used and I enjoy using them myself and it's fun. These types of projects are good ways of getting people interested in the whole field of archaeology and it's a good way to make new archaeology so that's it. It's better than calling it a holiday. I suppose it's taking on sort of a responsibility for some of the sites up here and giving to know them better to see how they've changed over the past years. It's as much about serious research, original research but we love going out as a gang and that's what this project really offers. The main thing was I think being able to tap into expertise that we would never ever ever have been able to do. I met people who were exciting and had done things that I learned from them. I also found it really post stimulating because we had this thing in the town and it was something which we as a community could get involved with but at the same time having the ability to actually spread ourselves and meet other people and just take the message that we thought were fabulous to everybody else and get the support. For me it really invigorated my desire to get involved in the archaeological world. I've been involved in a big thing, got involved in a project and I've actually been inspired to turn up the coast of the rest of Ireland off the back and getting back involved in archaeology. And we had some wonderful people at all these various conferences. Especially at the conference in St Andrews with Fernandez. You know I thought I'd pass on doing all sorts of things but I'd like to be funding you recent life as a project and I think that's been very useful because you get all the throne and that is to be involved in something else.