The 'Grave Goods' project was undertaken between July and September 2020. The aim of the project was to improve the care of mortuary contexts in England through a better understanding of the unique threats posed by the private ownership of grave goods. Research was undertaken to establish broad trends in the public discovery of grave goods, and to understand the scale and implications of their subsequent sale on the antiquities market. Naturally, these data touched on a wider range to ethical and practical issues in public archaeology. Information was collated on the frequency and character of in-situ grave goods (i.e. when found in association with human remains), and unstratified grave goods (i.e. when found in plough soil) reported to the Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS). Further information was gained through a three-month monitoring exercise of internet auction houses. In 2011 the grave of an Anglo-Saxon teenage girl dating to the seventh century was discovered during excavations undertaken by Cambridge Archaeology Unit. The burial included a gold cross pendant in addition to an array of other artefacts. The assemblage was generously donated by the landowner to Cambridge University's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.