Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech
Fieldwork in the mid-1980s at Neolithic flint-mining sites in West Sussex investigated previously unknown flint-working areas at both Long Down and Harrow Hill, showing that axeheads were the main product at both sites. Since then, the revision of radiocarbon dates using Bayesian analysis has revolutionised our understanding of the Neolithic period in Britain, demonstrating that flint mines are amongst the earliest known Neolithic sites in southern England: they appear sometime after mining took place on adjacent parts of the European continent and before causewayed enclosures were first constructed in southern England. Axeheads fabricated at the flint-mining sites were used as votive offerings, part of the interdependent belief system associated with Carinated Bowl pottery and cereal horticulture that was characteristic of the earliest Neolithic ‘horizon’ in southern England. Both were probably introduced by small-scale movements of farmers across the Channel from the European continent
Baczkowski, J. 2014. Learning by experience: the flint mines of Southern England and their continental origins, Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 33 (2), 135–53
Baczkowski, J. and Holgate, R. in print. Neolithic flint mines in West Sussex: results of fieldwork in 1985–86, Sussex Archaeological Collections 155, 1–30
Barber, M., Field, D. and Topping, P. 1999. The Neolithic Flint Mines of England, London, English Heritage
Barclay, A. 2014. Re-dating the Coneybury Anomoly and its implications for understanding the earliest Neolithic pottery from southern England, PAST (TheNewsletter of the Prehistoric Society) 77, 11–13
Bates, M.R. and Whittaker, K. 2004. Landscape evolution in the Lower Thames Valley: implications for the archaeology of the earlier Holocene period. In J. Cotton and D. Field (eds), Towards a New Stone Age: Aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England, York, Council for British Archaeology ResearchReport 137, 50–70
Cleal, R.M.J. 2004. The Dating and Diversity of the Earliest Ceramics of Wessex and South-west England. In R. Cleal and J. Pollard (eds), Monuments and Material Culture. Papers in honour of an Avebury archaeologist: Isobel Smith, Salisbury, East Knoyle, Hobnob Press, 164–192
Coles, B. 1998. Doggerland: a Speculative Survey, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 64, 45–81
Coles, J.M. and Orme, B.J. 1976. The Sweet Track, railway site, Somerset Levels Papers 2, 34–65
Collet, C., Hauzeur, A. and Lech, J. 2008. Les Mines Néolithique de Spiennes: état des Connaissances et Perspectives de Recherche. In The Neolithic in theNear East and Europe, Oxford, Archaeopress, British Archaeological Reports International Series, 129–133
Craddock, P.T, Cowell, M.R., Leese, M.R. and Hughes, M.J. 1983. The trace element composition of polished flint axes as an indicator of source, Archaeometry 25, 135–163
Ebbeson, K. 1993. Sacrifices to the powers of nature. In S. Hauss and B. Storgaard (eds.), Digging into the past. 25 years of archaeology in Denmark, Copenhagen-Aarhus, Aarhus University Press, 122–125
Felder, P.J., Rademakers, P.C. and De Grooth, M.E. 1998. Excavations of Prehistoric Flint Mines at Rijckholt-St. Geertruid (Limburg, The Netherlands) by the ‘Prehistoric Flint Mines of the Dutch Geological Society, LimburgSection, Bonn, Archäologische Berichte 12
Gardiner, J.P. 1984. Lithic distributions and Neolithic settlement patterns in Central Southern England. In R. Bradley and J. Gardiner (eds), Neolithic Studies: a review of some current research, Oxford, Archaeopress, British Archaeological Reports, British Series 133, 15–40
Historic England 2015. Building the Future, Transforming our Past. Celebrating development-led archaeology in England 1990–201, London, Historic England Publishing
Holgate, R. 1988. Neolithic Settlement of the Thames Basin, Oxford, Archaeopress, British Archaeological Reports, British Series 194
Holgate, R. 1991. Prehistoric Flint Mines, Princes Risborough, Shire Publications Ltd., Shire Archaeology 67
Holgate, R. 1995a. Neolithic flint mining in Britain, Archaeologia Polona 33, 133–161
Holgate, R. 1995b. GB 4 Harrow Hill near Findon, West Sussex, Archaeologia Polona 33, 347–350
Holgate, R. 1995c. GB 6 Long Down near Chichester, West Sussex, Archaeologia Polona 33, 350–352
Holgate, R. 2003. Late Glacial and Post-Glacial huntergatherers in Sussex. In D. Rudling (ed.), The Archaeology of Sussex to AD 2000, University of Sussex, Heritage Marketing and Publications Ltd., The Centre for Continuing Education, 29–38
Holgate, R. 2004. Managing change: the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in south-east England. In J. Cotton and D. Field (eds), Towards a New Stone Age:Aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England, York, Council for British Archaeology Research Report 137, 24–28
Jacobi, R.M. 1981. The Last Hunters in Hampshire. In S.J. Shennan and R.T. Schadla-Hall (eds), The Archaeology of Hampshire. From the Palaeolithic to theIndustrial Revolution, Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society Monograph 1, 10–25
Kinnes, I.A. 2004. Trans Manche: l’entente cordiale or vive la difference. In J. Cotton and D. Field (eds), Towards a New Stone Age: Aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England, York, Council for British Archaeology Research Report 137, 191–195
Macgrail, S. 1993. Prehistoric seafaring in the Channel. In C. Scarre and F. Healy (eds), Trade and Exchange in Prehistoric Europe, Oxford, Oxbow Monograph 33, 199–210
Payne, G. 1880. Celtic remains discovered at Grovehurst, Milton, Archaeologia Cantiana 13, 122–6
Sheridan, A. and Pétrequin, P. 2014. Constructing a Narrative for the Neolithic of Britain and Ireland. The Use of ‘Hard Science’ and Archaeological Reasoning, Proceedings of the British Academy 198, 369–90
Topping, P. 2004. The South Downs flint mines: towards an ethnography of prehistoric flint extraction. In J. Cotton and D. Field (eds), Towards a New Stone Age: Aspects of the Neolithic in South-East England, York, Council for British Archaeology Research Report 137, 177–199
Whittle, A. 1995. Gifts from the earth: symbolic dimensions of the use and production of Neolithic flint and stone axes, Archaeologia Polona 33, 247–59
Whittle, A., Healy, F. and Bayliss, A. 2011. Gathering Time. Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland, Oxford, Oxbow Books
Licencja Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa-Na tych samych warunkach 3.0 Polska
Zasób chroniony prawem autorskim. [CC BY-SA 3.0 PL] Korzystanie dozwolone zgodnie z licencją Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa-Na tych samych warunkach 3.0 Polska, której pełne postanowienia dostępne są pod adresem: ; -
Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Biblioteka Instytutu Archeologii i Etnologii PAN
Program Operacyjny Polska Cyfrowa, lata 2014-2020, Działanie 2.3 : Cyfrowa dostępność i użyteczność sektora publicznego; środki z Europejskiego Funduszu Rozwoju Regionalnego oraz współfinansowania krajowego z budżetu państwa ; Unia Europejska. Europejski Fundusz Rozwoju Regionalnego
2 paź 2020
30 cze 2020
557
https://rcin.org.pl/iae/publication/99621
Nazwa wydania | Data |
---|---|
Holgate, Robin, 2018, Flint Mining and the Beginning of Farming in Southern England | 2 paź 2020 |
Balcer, Bogdan
Lech, Jacek
Małecka-Kukawka, Jolanta (1955– ) Werra, Dagmara
Balcer, Bogdan (1936– )
Bąbel, Jerzy