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Living With The Flood Mesolithic To Postmedieval Archaeological Remains At Mill Lane Sawston Cambridgeshire Samantha Paul

  • SKU: BELL-54653550
Living With The Flood Mesolithic To Postmedieval Archaeological Remains At Mill Lane Sawston Cambridgeshire Samantha Paul
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Living With The Flood Mesolithic To Postmedieval Archaeological Remains At Mill Lane Sawston Cambridgeshire Samantha Paul instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxbow Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.34 MB
Pages: 128
Author: Samantha Paul, Kevin Colls, Henry P. Chapman
ISBN: 9781782979661, 1782979662
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

Living With The Flood Mesolithic To Postmedieval Archaeological Remains At Mill Lane Sawston Cambridgeshire Samantha Paul by Samantha Paul, Kevin Colls, Henry P. Chapman 9781782979661, 1782979662 instant download after payment.

The site at Mill Lane, Sawston, represents millennia of human activity within a dynamic and changing landscape setting. River valleys have been a focus for human activity since the early Holocene and, in addition to providing abundant archaeological evidence for this activity, the proximity to water also highlights the potential for the preservation of both archaeological remains and palaeoenvironmental source material. However, human activity within river valleys also commonly bridges areas of both wetland and dryland; ecological zones which are often approached using quite different archaeological methods and which present considerable differences in levels of archaeological visibility and preservation. The site at Mill Lane offered an uncommon opportunity to explore the interface between these two types of environment.

Here we present the results of the study of a wetland/dryland interface on the edge of palaeochannels of the River Cam in Cambridgeshire. Through the integrated archaeological and palaeoenvironmental analysis of a site on the western edge of Sawston, a detailed picture of life on the edge of the floodplain from the late glacial to the post-medieval periods has been developed. At the heart of this is the relationship between people and their changing environment, which reveals a shifting pattern of ritual, occupation and more transitory activity as the riparian landscape in a wooded setting became a wetland within a more openly grazed environment. The presence of potential built structures dating to the early Neolithic, the early Bronze Age and the early Anglo-Saxon periods provides some sense of continuity, although the nature of these structures and the environmental context within which they were constructed was very different.

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