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Paleolithic archaeology at the Swan Valley Community School, Swanscombe, Kent

Paleolithic archaeology at the Swan Valley Community School, Swanscombe, Kent
Paleolithic archaeology at the Swan Valley Community School, Swanscombe, Kent
This paper reports on the recovery of Palaeolithic flint artefacts and faunal remains from fluvial gravels at the base of a sequence of Pleistocene sediments revealed during construction works at two sites to the south of Swanscombe village. Although outside the mapped extent of the Boyn Hill/Orsett Formation, the newly discovered deposits can be firmly correlated with the Middle Gravels and Upper Loam from the Barnfield Pit sequence dating to c. 400,000-380,000 BP. This increases greatly the known extent of these deposits, one horizon of which produced the Swanscombe Skull, and has provided more information on their upper part.

Comparison of the lithic assemblages from volume-controlled sieving with those from general monitoring demonstrated that artefact collections formed without controlled methods of recovery, such as form the majority of the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic archaeological record, are likely to be disproportionately dominated by larger, more visible and more collectable neatly made handaxes to the detriment of more poorly made, asymmetrical handaxes and cores, flakes and percussors. The lithic assemblage from the fluvial gravel was confirmed as dominated by pointed handaxes, supporting previous studies of artefacts from the equivalent Lower Middle Gravel at Barnfield Pit. The raw material characteristics of the assemblage were investigated, and it was concluded that there was no indication that the preference for pointed shapes could be related to either the shape or source of raw material.

This paper also reviews the significance of lithic assemblages from disturbed fluvial contexts, and concludes that, contrary to some current perspectives, they have a valuable role to play complementing less disturbed evidence in developing understanding of the Palaeolithic.
palaeolithic archaeology, early man in britain, ancient landscapes, pleistocene geology
0079-497X
219-259
Wenban-Smith, F.F.
d2cdf06f-ff1d-41f7-a57c-a9c8e25a2110
Bridgland, D.R.
ed568247-e05a-45bc-a569-1d5589057f53
Wenban-Smith, F.F.
d2cdf06f-ff1d-41f7-a57c-a9c8e25a2110
Bridgland, D.R.
ed568247-e05a-45bc-a569-1d5589057f53

Wenban-Smith, F.F. and Bridgland, D.R. (2001) Paleolithic archaeology at the Swan Valley Community School, Swanscombe, Kent. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 67, 219-259.

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper reports on the recovery of Palaeolithic flint artefacts and faunal remains from fluvial gravels at the base of a sequence of Pleistocene sediments revealed during construction works at two sites to the south of Swanscombe village. Although outside the mapped extent of the Boyn Hill/Orsett Formation, the newly discovered deposits can be firmly correlated with the Middle Gravels and Upper Loam from the Barnfield Pit sequence dating to c. 400,000-380,000 BP. This increases greatly the known extent of these deposits, one horizon of which produced the Swanscombe Skull, and has provided more information on their upper part.

Comparison of the lithic assemblages from volume-controlled sieving with those from general monitoring demonstrated that artefact collections formed without controlled methods of recovery, such as form the majority of the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic archaeological record, are likely to be disproportionately dominated by larger, more visible and more collectable neatly made handaxes to the detriment of more poorly made, asymmetrical handaxes and cores, flakes and percussors. The lithic assemblage from the fluvial gravel was confirmed as dominated by pointed handaxes, supporting previous studies of artefacts from the equivalent Lower Middle Gravel at Barnfield Pit. The raw material characteristics of the assemblage were investigated, and it was concluded that there was no indication that the preference for pointed shapes could be related to either the shape or source of raw material.

This paper also reviews the significance of lithic assemblages from disturbed fluvial contexts, and concludes that, contrary to some current perspectives, they have a valuable role to play complementing less disturbed evidence in developing understanding of the Palaeolithic.

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Published date: 2001
Keywords: palaeolithic archaeology, early man in britain, ancient landscapes, pleistocene geology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 12064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/12064
ISSN: 0079-497X
PURE UUID: fbcb86d2-abaa-47b2-a12a-33a336aa2461

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Date deposited: 18 Dec 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:04

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Contributors

Author: D.R. Bridgland

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