Life before Stonehenge: the hunter-gatherer occupation and environment of Blick Mead revealed by sedaDNA, pollen and spores
Life before Stonehenge: the hunter-gatherer occupation and environment of Blick Mead revealed by sedaDNA, pollen and spores
The Neolithic and Bronze Age construction and habitation of the Stonehenge Landscape has been extensively explored in previous research. However, little is known about the scale of pre-Neolithic activity and the extent to which the later monumental complex occupied an ‘empty’ landscape. There has been a long-running debate as to whether the monumental archaeology of Stonehenge was created in an uninhabited forested landscape or whether it was constructed in an already partly open area of pre-existing significance to late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. This is of significance to a global discussion about the relationship between incoming farmers and indigenous hunter-gatherer societies that is highly relevant to both Old and New World archaeology. Here we present the results of plant sedaDNA, palynological and geoarchaeological analysis at the Late hunter-gatherer site complex of Blick Mead at the junction of the drylands of Salisbury Plain and the floodplain of the River Avon, on the edge of the Stonehenge World Heritage Site. The findings are placed within a chronological framework built on OSL, radiocarbon and relative archaeological dating. We show that Blick Mead existed in a clearing in deciduous woodland, exploited by aurochsen, deer and hunter-gatherers for approximately 4000 years. Given its rich archaeology and longevity this strongly supports the arguments of continuity between the Late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers activity and Neolithic monument builders, and more specifically that this was a partially open environment important to both groups. This study also demonstrates that sediments from low-energy floodplains can provide suitable samples for successful environmental assaying using sedaDNA, provided they are supported by secure dating and complementary environmental proxies.
Hudson, Samuel, Michael
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Pears, Benjamin
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Jacques, David
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Fonville, Thierry
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Hughes, Paul
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Alsos, Inger G.
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Snape, Lisa
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Lang, Andreas
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Brown, Antony
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27 April 2022
Hudson, Samuel, Michael
e4c37e3d-55c8-4ddf-b7b6-75a7705f774e
Pears, Benjamin
36d04a0f-6948-4e68-8f60-3a2a54d70bd0
Jacques, David
30905c0c-38eb-44cf-862e-61653543124e
Fonville, Thierry
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Hughes, Paul
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Alsos, Inger G.
88244b90-b66f-4271-9064-db0544dec568
Snape, Lisa
d7048da5-96fd-4a20-a3b6-35a04332b005
Lang, Andreas
d4303581-0fa8-49f7-af61-0d27b7dc8d01
Brown, Antony
c51f9d3e-02b0-47da-a483-41c354e78fab
Hudson, Samuel, Michael, Pears, Benjamin, Jacques, David, Fonville, Thierry, Hughes, Paul, Alsos, Inger G., Snape, Lisa, Lang, Andreas and Brown, Antony
(2022)
Life before Stonehenge: the hunter-gatherer occupation and environment of Blick Mead revealed by sedaDNA, pollen and spores.
PLoS ONE, 17 (4 April), [e0266789].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0266789).
Abstract
The Neolithic and Bronze Age construction and habitation of the Stonehenge Landscape has been extensively explored in previous research. However, little is known about the scale of pre-Neolithic activity and the extent to which the later monumental complex occupied an ‘empty’ landscape. There has been a long-running debate as to whether the monumental archaeology of Stonehenge was created in an uninhabited forested landscape or whether it was constructed in an already partly open area of pre-existing significance to late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. This is of significance to a global discussion about the relationship between incoming farmers and indigenous hunter-gatherer societies that is highly relevant to both Old and New World archaeology. Here we present the results of plant sedaDNA, palynological and geoarchaeological analysis at the Late hunter-gatherer site complex of Blick Mead at the junction of the drylands of Salisbury Plain and the floodplain of the River Avon, on the edge of the Stonehenge World Heritage Site. The findings are placed within a chronological framework built on OSL, radiocarbon and relative archaeological dating. We show that Blick Mead existed in a clearing in deciduous woodland, exploited by aurochsen, deer and hunter-gatherers for approximately 4000 years. Given its rich archaeology and longevity this strongly supports the arguments of continuity between the Late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers activity and Neolithic monument builders, and more specifically that this was a partially open environment important to both groups. This study also demonstrates that sediments from low-energy floodplains can provide suitable samples for successful environmental assaying using sedaDNA, provided they are supported by secure dating and complementary environmental proxies.
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journal.pone.0266789
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 March 2022
Published date: 27 April 2022
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© 2022 Hudson et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Local EPrints ID: 457191
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457191
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 4252b9a4-8e4e-42de-90be-d30714715a57
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Date deposited: 26 May 2022 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:09
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Author:
David Jacques
Author:
Thierry Fonville
Author:
Inger G. Alsos
Author:
Lisa Snape
Author:
Andreas Lang
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