RCIN and OZwRCIN projects

Object

Title: Flint Mining and the Beginning of Farming in Southern England

Creator:

Holgate, Robin

Date issued/created:

2018

Resource type:

Text

Subtitle:

Between History and Archaeology : papers in honour of Jacek Lech

Publisher:

Archaeopress Archaeology

Place of publishing:

Oxford; England

Description:

29 cm

Type of object:

Book/Chapter

Abstract:

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

References:

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
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Start page:

37

End page:

42

Detailed Resource Type:

Article

Resource Identifier:

oai:rcin.org.pl:130307

Language:

eng

Rights:

Creative Commons Attribution BY-SA 3.0 PL license

Terms of use:

Copyright-protected material. [CC BY-SA 3.0 PL] May be used within the scope specified in Creative Commons Attribution BY-SA 3.0 PL license, full text available at: ; -

Digitizing institution:

Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Original in:

Library of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Projects co-financed by:

Operational Program Digital Poland, 2014-2020, Measure 2.3: Digital accessibility and usefulness of public sector information; funds from the European Regional Development Fund and national co-financing from the state budget. ; European Union. European Regional Development Fund

Access:

Open

Object collections:

Last modified:

Oct 2, 2020

In our library since:

Jun 30, 2020

Number of object content downloads / hits:

557

All available object's versions:

https://rcin.org.pl/iae/publication/99621

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