The modern visitor to Devon travelling west into the region is greeted by a panorama of the high ground & rocky outcrops of Dartmoor. In a county renowned for its rolling hills Dartmoors high moors topped by granite tors preside over the massive folds of its peripheral valleys incised by the fast-moving moorland rivers & streams as they flow towards the hinterl&. Dartmoor was designated as one of Englands first National Parks in 1951. It is this natural beauty & tranquil rural landscape that initially attracts visitors but a fuller appreciation of this landscape is enhanced by knowledge of its cultural past. Dartmoor is southern Englands largest upland tract often promoted as Englands last wilderness. Nevertheless it is a maintained landscape. Its management began with traditional forms of hill farming & woodland management in the Neolithic & continues to the present day. The Field Archaeology of Dartmoor describes & narrates Dartmoors landscape history from 4000 BC to the present analysing & summarising archaeological & historical studies from the 19th century onwards. A brief section describes Dartmoors geological shape. Then its prehistoric settlement Romano-British organisation medieval character & early tin industry are described in turn. Next Dartmoors 19th- & 20th-century industrial landscape & heritage (tin copper silver-lead & China clay) & how they co-existed with traditional forms of upland farming are described. Subsidiary industries (peat gunpowder mills ice works & tramways) & the moors use for military training bring the narrative up to the present. A concluding summary assesses Dartmoors history & ponders its future.