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Settling the argument: the contribution of use-wear studies to understanding artefact scatters in Neolithic Britain

Settling the argument: the contribution of use-wear studies to understanding artefact scatters in Neolithic Britain
Settling the argument: the contribution of use-wear studies to understanding artefact scatters in Neolithic Britain

Our understanding of the Neolithic of southern Britain has been largely based on the interpretation of monumental landscapes such as those around Stonehenge and Avebury. The remains of domestic structures dating to the Neolithic are rare, and when found, are often associated with small assemblages of material culture. The most common forms of settlement evidence are unstratified artefact scatters, which have little evidence of associated structural remains. As a result, our understanding of Neolithic settlement is poor. We have limited knowledge of what craft and subsistence activities were associated with them, and we do not know how quotidian practices were organised at a settlement or landscape level. 

Taking the West Kennet Avenue Occupation Site as an example, this paper will show how use-wear analysis can be combined with a detailed technological analysis to reveal details of the character and temporality of a Neolithic settlement. The use-wear analysis will focus on the assemblage of microdenticulates from the site. It further explores the character and potential contact material related to Polish 23, the distinctive use-polish that occurs on these tools, and shows how the combination of spatial analysis and use-wear analysis can separate different episodes of occupation in a scatter of unstratified artefacts. The results provide crucial insight into the history of settlement in the Avebury landscape and shed further light on the character of use of microdenticulates, supporting the argument that they were used for processing plant fibres for the production of textiles.

Artefact Scatters, Avebury, Microdenticulates, Neolithic settlements, Polish 23, Use-Wear Analysis, West Kennet Avenue
2352-409X
Chan, Ben
7fa328a9-d32c-4e6f-8b4e-01296ffe5138
Chan, Ben
7fa328a9-d32c-4e6f-8b4e-01296ffe5138

Chan, Ben (2024) Settling the argument: the contribution of use-wear studies to understanding artefact scatters in Neolithic Britain. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports, 57, [104686]. (doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2024.104686).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Our understanding of the Neolithic of southern Britain has been largely based on the interpretation of monumental landscapes such as those around Stonehenge and Avebury. The remains of domestic structures dating to the Neolithic are rare, and when found, are often associated with small assemblages of material culture. The most common forms of settlement evidence are unstratified artefact scatters, which have little evidence of associated structural remains. As a result, our understanding of Neolithic settlement is poor. We have limited knowledge of what craft and subsistence activities were associated with them, and we do not know how quotidian practices were organised at a settlement or landscape level. 

Taking the West Kennet Avenue Occupation Site as an example, this paper will show how use-wear analysis can be combined with a detailed technological analysis to reveal details of the character and temporality of a Neolithic settlement. The use-wear analysis will focus on the assemblage of microdenticulates from the site. It further explores the character and potential contact material related to Polish 23, the distinctive use-polish that occurs on these tools, and shows how the combination of spatial analysis and use-wear analysis can separate different episodes of occupation in a scatter of unstratified artefacts. The results provide crucial insight into the history of settlement in the Avebury landscape and shed further light on the character of use of microdenticulates, supporting the argument that they were used for processing plant fibres for the production of textiles.

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Accepted/In Press date: 10 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2024
Published date: 14 July 2024
Keywords: Artefact Scatters, Avebury, Microdenticulates, Neolithic settlements, Polish 23, Use-Wear Analysis, West Kennet Avenue

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507554
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507554
ISSN: 2352-409X
PURE UUID: 7ae78401-7c95-4b89-bb68-440294bcc4b7
ORCID for Ben Chan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7859-6762

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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2025 17:30
Last modified: 13 Dec 2025 02:50

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