This paper presents evidence of the discovery of a new Middle Pleistocene site in central southern England, with undisturbed evidence of hominin occupation well-dated to an interstadial towards the end of Marine Isotope Stage 8, c. 250,000 BP. The site consists of a preserved remnant of a river terrace and its alluvial floodplain overlain by chalk-rich bankside deposits, all abutting a Chalk bedrock riverbank. It preserves an area of occupation with activity focused on the riverbank, complemented by occasional activity on a palaeo-landsurface developed on the surface of the alluvial floodplain. Lithic technology at the site consists almost entirely of handaxe manufacture, allowing attribution to an Acheulian industrial tradition. Mammalian ...
At Sutton Cross, eastern England, an undated River Nene 2nd Terrace was known to record a complex se...
This paper presents a review of AMS radiocarbon dating evidence for human occupation of Britain duri...
Gough's Cave is still Britain's most significant Later Upper Palaeolithic site. New ultrafiltered ra...
The archaeology of Britain during the early Middle Pleistocene (MIS 19–12) is represented by a numbe...
Fluvial terrace sequences of Pleistocene rivers provide a chronological framework for examining broa...
The Middle and Upper Pleistocene sequence in the Lower Thames: a record of Milankovitch climatic flu...
To elucidate the Middle and Late Pleistocene environmental history of south-central England, we repo...
Investigations at Oak Tree Fields, Cerney Wick, Gloucestershire, in western England have revealed a ...
The timing, environmental setting and archaeological signatures of an early human presence in northe...
Research into the British Lower and Middle Palaeolithic has traditionally focused upon artefact typo...
Lower Palaeolithic artefacts have been reported at Happisburgh, north Norfolk, in sediments that hav...
Northern Europe experienced cycles of hominin habitation and absence during the Middle Pleistocene. ...
International audienceThe dispersal of hominin groups with an Acheulian technology and associated bi...
Middle Pleistocene fluvial deposits of the Corbets Tey Formation at Purfleet, Essex, provide evidenc...
This paper links research questions in Quaternary geology with those in Palaeolithic archaeology. A ...
At Sutton Cross, eastern England, an undated River Nene 2nd Terrace was known to record a complex se...
This paper presents a review of AMS radiocarbon dating evidence for human occupation of Britain duri...
Gough's Cave is still Britain's most significant Later Upper Palaeolithic site. New ultrafiltered ra...
The archaeology of Britain during the early Middle Pleistocene (MIS 19–12) is represented by a numbe...
Fluvial terrace sequences of Pleistocene rivers provide a chronological framework for examining broa...
The Middle and Upper Pleistocene sequence in the Lower Thames: a record of Milankovitch climatic flu...
To elucidate the Middle and Late Pleistocene environmental history of south-central England, we repo...
Investigations at Oak Tree Fields, Cerney Wick, Gloucestershire, in western England have revealed a ...
The timing, environmental setting and archaeological signatures of an early human presence in northe...
Research into the British Lower and Middle Palaeolithic has traditionally focused upon artefact typo...
Lower Palaeolithic artefacts have been reported at Happisburgh, north Norfolk, in sediments that hav...
Northern Europe experienced cycles of hominin habitation and absence during the Middle Pleistocene. ...
International audienceThe dispersal of hominin groups with an Acheulian technology and associated bi...
Middle Pleistocene fluvial deposits of the Corbets Tey Formation at Purfleet, Essex, provide evidenc...
This paper links research questions in Quaternary geology with those in Palaeolithic archaeology. A ...
At Sutton Cross, eastern England, an undated River Nene 2nd Terrace was known to record a complex se...
This paper presents a review of AMS radiocarbon dating evidence for human occupation of Britain duri...
Gough's Cave is still Britain's most significant Later Upper Palaeolithic site. New ultrafiltered ra...