Although crucifixion was a common and immensely cruel form of execution throughout the Roman empire, only two skeletons of victims have ever been found.
The first was found in the tomb of Jehochanan in Jerusalem.
The second was discovered in a roadside settlement on the Via Devana in Fenstanton, Cambridge and has come to be known as 'The Cambridgeshire Crucifixion'. In an Open Access article for British Archaeology Magazine, Crucifixion in the Fens: Life and Death in Roman Fenstanton David Ingham & Corinne Duhig report on the excavations, and what they believe to be rare evidence for ancient crucifixion - and the first from northern Europe. A BBC documentary describes its discovery: The Cambridgeshire Crucifixion.
The discovery of a remarkably preserved leather tent at Vindolanda possibly resolves the dispute as to whether Paul was a tentmaker or a leather worker. See Imagining Luke-Acts in Roman Britain, page 195.
In an Open Access article, Carol Van-Driel describes Vindolanda's tent: Warm and Dry, a Complete Roman Tent from Vindolanda.
Wonderfully preserved wooden tent pegs might have been manufactured today! See the blog post, The Romans, Camping and Me.