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England: Stone Age Sites of Britain - Photographer's Guide
Part II – England: Stone Age Sites of Britain See Also: Part I – Scotland: Stone Age Archaeological Sites of Britain Part III – Wales, Channel Islands and Other Stong Age Sites of Britain Paleolithic (2.6 million B.C. – 10,000 B.C.): The first evidence of a human ancestor living in Britain comes from a set of 50 fossilized footprints left in an ancient streambed near the town of Happisburgh in County Norfork, England, about 850,000-950,000 B.C. These early arrivals to Britain would have come at a time when most of Britain was connected to mainland Europe via a now submerged area of the North Sea, known as Doggerland. The Paleolithic was a time of monumental fluctuations in climate, that led to significant sea level variation, vegetation and animal life changes, and the spread and retreat of giant glacial icefields. These changes also affected the spread and retreat of early human populations, and it appears at times the complete depopulating of Britain. Most of the evidence gathered to date comes from preserved human and animal remains, and stone tool fragments. Video: Doggerland Time Team Documentary (BBC) Mesolithic (11,000 to 5,500 B.C.): The Mesolithic in Britain is marked by the first permanent habitation of Britain by modern humans, and a gradual warming of the climate that saw a change in the landscape from Arctic tundra, to one more temperate that brought about the rapid spread of birch, pine and alder forests. The Mesolithic also saw the final submergence of Doggerland, making Britain into the island it is today. Neolithic (4,300 – 2,000 BC): As one might imagine, the Neolithic period offers the best-preserved evidence of stone age peoples in Britain, and there are a number of archaeological sites open to the public that offer beautiful examples of the buildings and monuments they constructed. These structures are due...Read more
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