A flaker from the Dogger Bank in the North Sea By the end of the Ice Age, the present North Sea was dry land stretching from Denmark to the British Isles. Here, life conditions for hunter tribes must have been good and similar to those in the adjoining areas – Southern Scandinavia, Eastern England, and the Netherlands. Due to the rise of the world seas, this large land area was gradually flooded after the Ice Age, and recent geological investigations have made it possible to gain a relatively good picture of the development history of the North Sea during the last c.14000 years. These investigations show that the highest land areas – primarily the Brown Bank towards the south and the Dogger Bank towards the north – must have been large land...
‘Climate’ is rarely experienced directly – contrary to day-to-day ‘weather’ and ‘seasons’ that manif...
During the transition between Dryas III and Preboreal Bornholm was probably a northern part of a pen...
The immigration of trees and the formation of forest after the Ice Age was one of the greatest trans...
The archaeology of the Vendsyssel area in Northern Jutland suggests that early human foragers reache...
Hunters and Fishers at SelbjergOn the north side of Limfjord, at Selbjerg on the southwestern tip of...
The development of specialized and commercial fishing activity in the island archipelago of Lofoten ...
North Sea Archaeologies traces the way people engaged with the North Sea from the end of the last ic...
In spite of alterations due to transgressions, Pleistocene forms are still discernible in the North ...
The Lateglacial between ∼14,600 - 11,500 cal yr BP is characterised by the rapid fluctuati...
The starting point for the present paper is a recent discovery of a well-preserved bone or antler fi...
Composite image of submerged landscapes The North Sea has long been known by archaeologists as a...
Late Glacial settlement in Vendsyssel The nu...
Ringkloster: Ertebølle trappers and wild boar hunters in eastern Jutland. A surve
Lately, evidence for early-Holocene emerging sedentism has been suggested among foragers in Northern...
North Sea Archaeologies traces the way people engaged with the North Sea from the end of the last ic...
‘Climate’ is rarely experienced directly – contrary to day-to-day ‘weather’ and ‘seasons’ that manif...
During the transition between Dryas III and Preboreal Bornholm was probably a northern part of a pen...
The immigration of trees and the formation of forest after the Ice Age was one of the greatest trans...
The archaeology of the Vendsyssel area in Northern Jutland suggests that early human foragers reache...
Hunters and Fishers at SelbjergOn the north side of Limfjord, at Selbjerg on the southwestern tip of...
The development of specialized and commercial fishing activity in the island archipelago of Lofoten ...
North Sea Archaeologies traces the way people engaged with the North Sea from the end of the last ic...
In spite of alterations due to transgressions, Pleistocene forms are still discernible in the North ...
The Lateglacial between ∼14,600 - 11,500 cal yr BP is characterised by the rapid fluctuati...
The starting point for the present paper is a recent discovery of a well-preserved bone or antler fi...
Composite image of submerged landscapes The North Sea has long been known by archaeologists as a...
Late Glacial settlement in Vendsyssel The nu...
Ringkloster: Ertebølle trappers and wild boar hunters in eastern Jutland. A surve
Lately, evidence for early-Holocene emerging sedentism has been suggested among foragers in Northern...
North Sea Archaeologies traces the way people engaged with the North Sea from the end of the last ic...
‘Climate’ is rarely experienced directly – contrary to day-to-day ‘weather’ and ‘seasons’ that manif...
During the transition between Dryas III and Preboreal Bornholm was probably a northern part of a pen...
The immigration of trees and the formation of forest after the Ice Age was one of the greatest trans...