This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time when the landscapes of north-west Europe were radically changing. These issues are investigated through a case study focused on the Channel Islands. We report on the excavation of two sites, Canal du Squez in Jersey and Lihou (GU582) in Guernsey, and the study of museum collections across the Channel Islands. We argue that people were drawn to this area as a result of the dynamic environmental processes occurring and the opportunities these created. The evidence suggests that the area was a particular focus during the Middle Mesolithic, when Guernsey and Alderney were already islands and while Jersey was a peninsula of northern France. Insula...
Shell middens, or shell-matrix deposits, occur in large numbers across the coastlines of the world f...
The Channel Plain Region, now largely submerged by high sea-level, incorporates the UK Crown depende...
Since 2010 a new field project drawn from major UK institutions including the UCL Institute of Archa...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This paper investigates the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Channel Islands. It presents a ne...
This paper investigates the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Channel Islands. It presents a ne...
The excavation described here forms part of a larger project, directed by the authors, entitled Neol...
The existence of a submerged landscape that may preserve Holocene material around the UK has long be...
Rising sea levels have been associated with human migration and behavioral shifts throughout prehist...
Coastal distributions such as that of the Neolithic chambered tombs of Brittany raise important ques...
Although prehistoric megalithic monuments dominate the landscape of Guernsey, these have yielded lit...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the American Association for the Advancemen...
The ‘western seaways’ are an arc of sea extending from the Channel Islands in the south, through the...
Shell middens, or shell-matrix deposits, occur in large numbers across the coastlines of the world f...
The Channel Plain Region, now largely submerged by high sea-level, incorporates the UK Crown depende...
Since 2010 a new field project drawn from major UK institutions including the UCL Institute of Archa...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This work provides new insights into human responses to and perceptions of sea-level rise at a time ...
This paper investigates the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Channel Islands. It presents a ne...
This paper investigates the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in the Channel Islands. It presents a ne...
The excavation described here forms part of a larger project, directed by the authors, entitled Neol...
The existence of a submerged landscape that may preserve Holocene material around the UK has long be...
Rising sea levels have been associated with human migration and behavioral shifts throughout prehist...
Coastal distributions such as that of the Neolithic chambered tombs of Brittany raise important ques...
Although prehistoric megalithic monuments dominate the landscape of Guernsey, these have yielded lit...
This is the final version. Available on open access from the American Association for the Advancemen...
The ‘western seaways’ are an arc of sea extending from the Channel Islands in the south, through the...
Shell middens, or shell-matrix deposits, occur in large numbers across the coastlines of the world f...
The Channel Plain Region, now largely submerged by high sea-level, incorporates the UK Crown depende...
Since 2010 a new field project drawn from major UK institutions including the UCL Institute of Archa...