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Frightful neighbourhood.

Julian Thomas

Antiquity. 2015;89:977-979.

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Abstract

Hugo Anderson-Whymark, Duncan Garrow and Fraser Sturt are to be congratulated on an important find and a robust evaluation of its significance. As they point out, it was Roger Jacobi who first introduced the notion that Britain had been culturally isolated from the continent following the flooding of the English Channel; this was on the basis of stylistic differences between the microlithic assemblages found in the two areas in the later Mesolithic. Equally, although Villeneuve-Saint-Germain communities were established in Normandy early in the fifth millennium BC, and Chassey/Michelsberg groups in the Pas-de-Calais perhaps six hundred years later, the material evidence of their cross-Channel relations with British and Irish hunter-gatherers is limited. On this basis, the view has developed that indigenous people in Britain would have been unaware of the developing Neolithic in France and Belgium. Consequently, they would have had no familiarity with domesticated plants and animals, polished stone tools, ceramics, large timber buildings and mortuary monuments until such innovations were brought to these islands by migrating agriculturalists at the end of the millennium. If Mesolithic people played any part at all in the Neolithic transition, it would only have been after the arrival of settlers on these shores.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication status:
Accepted
Publication type:
Publication form:
Author list:
Published date:
Article title:
Language:
eng
Journal title:
ISSN:
Volume:
89
Start page:
977
End page:
979
Total:
2
Pagination:
977-979
Digital Object Identifier:
http://dx.doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2015.78
Attached files embargo period:
Immediate release
Attached files release date:
23rd October, 2015
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:276224
Created by:
Thomas, Julian
Created:
23rd October, 2015, 16:10:58
Last modified by:
Thomas, Julian
Last modified:
23rd October, 2015, 16:10:58

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