Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria

Field surveys have revealed a substantial number of lithic scatters on the south-west Cumbrian coastal plain and the eastern limestone uplands of Cumbria. The raw materials used for toolmaking in the two areas show interesting contrasts, including predominant use of Irish Sea beach pebble flint in s...

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Main Author: P.J. Cherry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of York 2009-09-01
Series:Internet Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue26/cherry_index.html
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author P.J. Cherry
author_facet P.J. Cherry
author_sort P.J. Cherry
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description Field surveys have revealed a substantial number of lithic scatters on the south-west Cumbrian coastal plain and the eastern limestone uplands of Cumbria. The raw materials used for toolmaking in the two areas show interesting contrasts, including predominant use of Irish Sea beach pebble flint in south-west Cumbria during the Late Mesolithic and Neolithic, with minimal importation of chalk flints from Yorkshire and (possibly) Antrim during the Neolithic. In eastern Cumbria, raw materials in the Late Mesolithic were predominantly local cherts but with a significant element of pebble flint and chalk flint from Yorkshire. By the Neolithic, Yorkshire chalk flint had become the dominant raw material. In both locations, pebbles of fine-grained volcanic tuff akin to Group VI were being used as a substitute for flint by communities using Late Mesolithic technologies, although there is no evidence for exploitation at source during the Late Mesolithic. Thus in eastern Yorkshire, Late Mesolithic communities can be demonstrated to have been using volcanic tuff at the same time as they were obtaining flint from Yorkshire. A substantial number of flakes of volcanic tuff arising from the use or reworking of stone implements has been found in eastern Cumbria. These provide evidence for different types of stone implements in actual use.
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spelling doaj.art-795e2be6821b408a87c906d63091016c2024-02-02T14:39:48ZengUniversity of YorkInternet Archaeology1363-53872009-09-012610.11141/ia.26.3 Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric CumbriaP.J. CherryField surveys have revealed a substantial number of lithic scatters on the south-west Cumbrian coastal plain and the eastern limestone uplands of Cumbria. The raw materials used for toolmaking in the two areas show interesting contrasts, including predominant use of Irish Sea beach pebble flint in south-west Cumbria during the Late Mesolithic and Neolithic, with minimal importation of chalk flints from Yorkshire and (possibly) Antrim during the Neolithic. In eastern Cumbria, raw materials in the Late Mesolithic were predominantly local cherts but with a significant element of pebble flint and chalk flint from Yorkshire. By the Neolithic, Yorkshire chalk flint had become the dominant raw material. In both locations, pebbles of fine-grained volcanic tuff akin to Group VI were being used as a substitute for flint by communities using Late Mesolithic technologies, although there is no evidence for exploitation at source during the Late Mesolithic. Thus in eastern Yorkshire, Late Mesolithic communities can be demonstrated to have been using volcanic tuff at the same time as they were obtaining flint from Yorkshire. A substantial number of flakes of volcanic tuff arising from the use or reworking of stone implements has been found in eastern Cumbria. These provide evidence for different types of stone implements in actual use.http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue26/cherry_index.htmlarchaeologyCumbriaraw materialsfield surveyvolcanic tuffIrish Sea flintchalk flintMesolithicNeolithic
spellingShingle P.J. Cherry
Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
Internet Archaeology
archaeology
Cumbria
raw materials
field survey
volcanic tuff
Irish Sea flint
chalk flint
Mesolithic
Neolithic
title Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
title_full Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
title_fullStr Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
title_full_unstemmed Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
title_short Flint and Tuff in Prehistoric Cumbria
title_sort flint and tuff in prehistoric cumbria
topic archaeology
Cumbria
raw materials
field survey
volcanic tuff
Irish Sea flint
chalk flint
Mesolithic
Neolithic
url http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue26/cherry_index.html
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