It's funny the remnants that you come across.
Looking for clearance townships, and everything's more or less crumbled and rotted away and is now covered in heather and peat...and then you find a big patch of nettles.... thing is that nettles thrive in high nitrogen .....like the end of the byre where the drainage ran.
Or trees that have grown up with funny boles to them. They can be old abandoned copices of willow, hazel, and the like.
Fruit trees too, apples, more commonly plums of some kind, that have outgrown their original prunings and become full sized trees.
Older data comes up in things like varves; the sedimentation layers in the bottom of lochs, ponds, lakes and the like. They can show the pollen record of the area in the past, and it can be tied into a record of climatic variations that give a tree ring like dating sequence.
For instance, a presently wooded environment that shows repeated layers of the pollen of cereal crops. Indicates what folks were growing there in the past. The pollen of trees themselves can be indicative of the changing progression of the forests too.
There's a real skill in reading a landscape, in working out the past from the present. It makes for some really interesting rambles
M