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Homo Britannicus

Page 27

by Chris Stringer


  D. C. Schreve, P. Harding, M. J. White, D. R. Bridgland, P. Allen, F. Clayton and D. H. Keen, ‘A Levallois Knapping Site at West Thurrock, Lower Thames, UK: Its Quaternary Context, Environment and Age’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, forthcoming

  A. Tuffreau and W. Roebroeks (eds.), Bilans sédimentaires et occupations humaines durant le dernier interglaciare en Europe et en Proche Orient (CERP, Lille, 2002)

  M. J. White and D. C. Schreve, ‘Island Britain – Peninsular Britain: Palaeogeography, Colonisation and the Earlier Palaeolithic Settlement of the British Isles’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 66(2000), 1–28

  M. White and N. Ashton, ‘Lower Palaeolithic Core Technology and the Origins of the Levallois Method in NW Europe’, Current Anthropology 44(2003), 598–609

  CHAPTER FIVEN Neanderthals and Us

  (various authors) ‘Neanderthals Meet Modern Humans’, Athena Review 2(4) (2001), 1–64

  S. Aldhouse-Green (ed.), Paviland Cave and the ‘Red Lady’: A Definitive Report (Western Academic and Specialist Press, Bristol, 2000)

  S. Aldhouse-Green, ‘Great Sites: Paviland Cave’, British Archaeology 61(2001), 20–24

  T. van Andel and W. Davies (eds.), Neanderthals and Modern Humans in the European Landscape during the Last Glaciation (McDonald Institute Monographs, Cambridge, 2003)

  W. Boismier, ‘Lynford Quarry: A Neanderthal Butchery Site’, Current Archaeology 182(2002), 53–8

  W. Boismier, D. C. Schreve, M. J. White, D. A. Robertson, A. J. Stuart, S. Etienne, J. Andrews, G. R. Coope, M. Field, F. M. L. Greeh, D. H. Ken, S. G. Lewis, C. A. French, E. Rhodes, J.-L. Schwenninger, K. Tovey and S. O’Connor, ‘A Middle Palaeolithic Site at Lynford Quarry, Mundford, Norfolk: Interim Statement’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 69(2003), 315–24

  R. Gore, ‘Dawn of Humans: Neanderthals’, National Geographic (January 1996), 2–35

  R. Gore, ‘Dawn of Humans: People Like Us’, National Geographic (July 2000), 90–117

  K. Harvati, S. R. Frost and K. P. McNulty, ‘Neanderthal Taxonomy Reconsidered: Implications of 3D Primate Models of Intra- and Interspecific Differences’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 101(2004), 1147–52

  K. Harvati and T. Harrison (eds.), Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives (Springer, New York, forthcoming)

  P. Mellars, ‘Neanderthals and the Modern Human Colonization of Europe’, Nature 432(2004), 461–5

  P. Mellars, C. Stringer, O. Bar-Yosef and K. Boyle (eds.), Rethinking the Human Revolution (McDonald Institute Monographs, Cambridge, forthcoming)

  M. P. Richards, P. B. Pettitt, M. C. Stiner and E. Trinkaus, ‘Stable Isotope Evidence for Increasing Dietary Breadth in the European Mid-Upper Paleolithic’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 98(2001), 6528–32

  D. C. Schreve (ed.), The Quaternary Mammals of Southern and Eastern England Field Guide (Quaternary Research Association, London, 2004)

  C. Stringer, ‘The Neanderthal–H. sapiens interface in Eurasia’, in

  K. Harvati and T. Harrison (eds.), Neanderthals Revisited: New Approaches and Perspectives (Springer, New York, forthcoming)

  C. Stringer and W. Davies, ‘Those Elusive Neanderthals’, Nature 410(2001), 791–2

  C. Stringer, H. Pälike, T. van Andel, B. Huntley, P. Valdes and J. Allen, ‘Climatic Stress and the Extinction of the Neanderthals’, in T. van Andel and W. Davies (eds.), Neanderthals and Modern Humans in the European Landscape during the Last Glaciation (McDonald Institute Monographs: Cambridge, 2003)

  C. B. Stringer, ‘Out of Africa – A Personal History’, in M. Nitecki (ed.), Origins of Anatomically Modern Humans (Plenum Press, New York, 1994)

  M. J. White, ‘The Stone Tool Assemblage from Lynford Quarry Mundford, and its Implications for Neanderthal Behaviour in Late Middle Palaeolithic Britain’, in W. Boismier (ed.), A Middle Palaeolithic Site at Lynford Quarry, Mundford, Norfolk (ERAUL, Liège, forthcoming) — ‘Things to do in Doggerland when your’re dead: surviving 0153at the northwestern-most fringe of Middle Palaeolithic Europe.’World Archaeology 38, 547–575

  M.J. White and R. M. Jacobi, ‘Two Sides to Every Story: Bout Coupé Handaxes Revisited’, Oxford Journal of Archaeology 21(2) (2002), 109–33

  CHAPTER SIX What they Gorged in Cheddar

  P. Andrews and Y. Fernández-Jalvo, ‘Cannibalism in Britain: Taphonomy of the Creswellian (Pleistocene) Faunal and Human Remains from Gough’s Cave (Somerset, England)’, Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Geology Series 58(supp) (2003), 59–81

  L. Barham, P. Priestley and A. Targett, In Search of Cheddar Man (Tempus, Stroud, 1999)

  R. N. E. Barton, R. M. Jacobi, D. Stapert and M. Street, ‘The Late Glacial Reoccupation of the British Isles and the Creswellian’, Journal of Quaternary Science 18(2003), 631–43

  A. Currant, R. Jacobi and C. B. Stringer, ‘Excavations at Gough’s Cave, Somerset 1986–7’, Antiquity 63(1989), 131–6

  L. Humphrey and C. Stringer, ‘The Human Cranial Remains from Gough’s Cave (Somerset, England)’, Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Geology Series 58(2002), 153–68

  R. M. Jacobi, ‘The Late Upper Palaeolithic Lithic Collection from Gough’s Cave, Cheddar, Somerset, and Human Use of the Cave’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 70(2005), 1–92

  R. M. Jacobi, ‘The Stone Age Archaeology of Church Hole, Creswell Crags, Nottinghamshire’, in P. B. Pettitt, P. Bahn and S. Ripoll (eds.), Palaeolithic Cave Art at Creswell Crags in European Context (Oxford University Press, Oxford, forthcoming)

  P. B. Pettitt, P. Bahn and S. Ripoll (eds.), Palaeolithic Cave Art at Creswell Crags in European Context (Oxford University Press, Oxford, forthcoming)

  A. W. G. Pike, M. Gilmore, P. B. Pettitt, R. Jacobi, S. Ripoll, P. Bahn and F. Muñoz, ‘Independent U-Series Verification of the Pleistocene Antiquity of the Palaeolithic Cave Art at Creswell Crags, UK’, Journal of Archaeological Science 32(2005), 1649–55

  M. Richards, R. Hedges, R. Jacobi, A. Currant and C. Stringer, ‘Gough’s Cave and Sun Hole Cave’, Journal of Archaeological Science 27(2000), 1–3

  M. Richards, R. Jacobi, J. Cook, P. B. Pettitt and C. Stringer, ‘Isotope Evidence for the Intensive Use of Marine Foods by Late Upper Palaeolithic Humans’, Journal of Human Evolution 49(2005), 390–94

  S. Ripoll, F. Muñoz, P. Bahn and P. B. Pettitt, ‘Palaeolithic Cave Engravings at Creswell Crags, England’, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 70(2004), 93–105

  D. C. Schreve (ed.), The Quaternary Mammals of Southern and Eastern England Field Guide (Quaternary Research Association, London, 2004)

  C. Stringer, ‘The Gough’s Cave Human Fossils: An Introduction’, Bulletin of The Natural History Museum Geology Series 56(2000), 135–9

  B. Sykes, The Seven Daughters of Eve (Bantam, London, 2001)

  E. Trinkaus, L. Humphrey, C. Stringer, S. Churchill and R. Tague, ‘Gough’s Cave 1(Somerset, England): An Assessment of the Sex and Age at Death’, Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Geology Series 58(supp) (2003), 45–50

  CHAPTER SEVEN Our Challenging Climates

  (various authors) ‘The Heat is On’, National Geographic (September 2004), 2–75

  (various authors) ‘Heat: How Global Warming is Changing Our World’, Guardian (supplement), 30June 2005

  (various authors) ‘Turning the Tide’, Observer/Carbon Trust (supplement), 26June 2005

  R. Alley, The Two-Mile Time Machine: Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change and Our Future (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 2002)

  J. Diamond, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed (Allen Lane, London, 2005)

  B. Fagan, The Long Summer: How Climate Changed Civilization (Granta Books, London, 2004)

  T. Flannery, The Weather Makers: The History and Future Impact of Climate Change (Allen Lane, London, 2006)

  R. A. Kerr, ‘News Focus – Three Degrees of Consensus’, Science 305(2004), 932–4

  J. Lovelock, The Revenge of Gaia (All
en Lane, London, 2006)

  P. N. Pearson and M. R. Palmer, ‘Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Concentrations Over the Past 60Million Years’, Nature 406(2000), 695–9

  R. T. Pinker, B. Zhang and E. G. Dutton, ‘Do Satellites Detect Trends in Surface Solar Radiation?’, Science 308(2005), 850–54

  D. L. Royer et al., ‘Paleobotanical Evidence for Near Present-day Levels of Atmospheric CO 2During Part of the Tertiary’, Science 292(2001), 2310–13

  W. Ruddiman, ‘How Did Humans First Alter Global Climate?’, Scientific American Vol. 292, No. 3(2005), 34–41

  H. J. Schellnhuber, W. Cramer, N. Nakicenovic, T. Wigley and G. Yohe (eds.), Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2006)

  M. Wild, H. Gilgen, A. Roesch, A. Ohmura, C. Long, E. Dutton,

  B. Forgan, A. Kallis, V. Russak and A. Tsvetkov, ‘From Dimming to Brightening: Decadal Changes in Solar Radiation at Earth’s Surface’, Science 308(2005), 847–850

  K. Willis, K. Bennett and D. Walker (eds.), The Evolutionary Legacy of the Ice Ages (Royal Society, London, 2004)

  Index

  Figures in italics refer to diagrams and illustrations

  Africa, and human origins 35–8, 113, 124–7, 127

  Agassiz, Louis 20–21

  Aldhouse-Green, Stephen 98

  Altamira Cave, Santander 25

  amino-acid dating 49–50

  Andrews, Peter 143

  Anglian ice age 39, 42–5, 49, 58– 9, 60, 65–6, 69

  Antiquités celtiques et antédiluviennes (Boucher de Perthes) 16–17

  Arduino, Giovanni 10, 21

  art 119–20, 122–3, 146–8

  Ashton, Nick 201–4

  Atlantic Heat Conveyor (Gulf Stream) 131–2, 169–70

  Attenborough, Sir David 177

  Aurignacian culture 124

  Austen, Frank 70

  Aveley, Essex 101–3

  Aveline’s Hole, Somerset 152–3

  Bacon Hole, Wales 110

  Bagford, John 3

  Bahn, Paul 147

  Banwell Bone Cave, Somerset 9, 111

  Barnfield Pit, Kent 34, 70, see also Swanscombe, Kent

  Barnham, Suffolk 79

  Beard, William 111

  Beeches Pit, Suffolk 83

  biblical interpretations of history 4–7, 9, 19

  Bilzingsleben, Germany 81–2

  Bishop, Mike 61–2

  Bize, France 14–15

  Bohunician culture 124

  bone tools 119

  Boucher de Perthes, Jacques 16–17, 26

  Boule, Marcellin 30, 72

  Boxgrove Man (‘Roger’) 65

  Boxgrove, Sussex 39–40, 51, 63–7

  Boyd Dawkins, Professor William 98

  Britain

  becomes an island 116, 157

  Hoxian interglacial period 78

  intermediate sea level 96

  isolation from the continent 106–110

  and Neanderthal Man 115

  Brixham Bone Cavern, Devon 12, 13, 14

  Brown, John 86

  Browne, Sir Thomas 4

  Bruckner, Eduard 21, 58, 68

  Buckland, Reverend William

  and Agassiz 19

  Buckland, Reverend William

  and Agassiz 19–20

  caricature 8

  Goat’s Hole Cave 9–10, 120

  Paviland Cave 22, 68, 121

  scientific approach 6, 121

  scientific approach 6–7

  and taphonomy 7–8

  Victoria Cave 109

  views challenged 11–12

  burial 123, 129, 152

  Bush, President George W. 173

  Busk, George 23, 26, 98

  Bytham River 45, 60

  Candy, Ian 215–18

  cannibalism 142–4

  Ceprano, Italy 40, 48

  Chardin, Teilhard de 34

  Châtelperronian culture 124

  Chauvet, France 120

  Cheddar Gorge, Somerset 123, 135–45, 151, 155

  Cheddar Man 137, 142, 151–2, 155–6

  Chellean culture 22

  Christy, Henry 25

  Churchill, Steve 80

  Clacton-on Sea, Essex, Hoxnian period 68

  Clactonian culture 79

  Clactonian culture 79–82, 86, 97

  Clark, Desmond 87

  climate change

  and albedo effect 166

  effects 174–6, 175

  evidence at Pakefield 47–8

  glaciers, melting 167

  global polluters 172–4

  greenhouse effect 161–6

  greenhouse gases 163–5

  history 160–63

  permafrost thawing 166

  possible solutions 176–82

  rising sea levels 167–9

  Thatcher on 170–72

  Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur 32

  Cook, Jill 143–4

  Coon, Carlton 113

  Coope, Russell 139, 218–21

  Crayford, Kent 103

  Creswell Crags, Derbyshire 119, 137, 146, 147

  Creswellian culture 142–7, 146, 151, 157, see also Cheddar Gorge, Somerset

  Cro-Magnon Man

  art 122–3

  European 157

  interbreeding 128–30

  and Mauer 27, 29

  origins 123–6

  ‘Red Lady’ 9, 120

  survival 181

  Vézère valley 25

  Cromerian interglacial 49–50, 58, 60–61, 69

  Currant, Andy 32, 59, 80–81, 138, 141, 184, 187–90

  Cuvier, Baron Georges 4, 5–6, 7

  Darwin, Charles 18

  Dawson, Charles 30–34

  de Charpentier, Jean 19–20

  de la Peyrere, Isaac 2

  dental evidence 100–101, 151–2

  Devensian ice age 58, 68, 134, 134–5

  Die Alpen im Eiszeitater (Penck/Bruckner) 21

  Dmanisi, Georgia 35–6, 51

  DNA/mtDNA evidence 24–5, 126–8, 153–6

  Dolní Vìstonice, Czech Republic 121–2

  Dubois, Eugene 27, 35

  Duckworth, Wynfrid 29

  Dugdale, Sir William 2

  Ebbsfleet, Kent 79

  Efremov, Ivan 7

  Elliot Smith, Grafton 29, 31

  Elveden, Suffolk 79

  Emiliani, Cesare 55

  Duckworth, Wynfrid 29

  Dugdale, Sir William 2

  Ebbsfleet, Kent 79

  Efremov, Ivan 7

  Elliot Smith, Grafton 29, 31

  Elveden, Suffolk 79

  Emiliani, Cesare 55–7

  Engis Cave, Belgium 15, 22

  Eoanthropus dawsoni 31

  Evans, John 17, 26, 29, 45–6

  Falconer, Hugh 12, 14, 17, 23, 26

  Fernández-Jalvo, Yolanda 143

  fire, early use of 83

  Foley, Robert 51, 95

  Formby Point, Merseyside 158–9

  Foxhall, Suffolk 27, 82–3

  Frere, John 3–4, 3, 18, 34, 70

  Fuhlrott, Johann Carl 23–4

  Galley Hill, Kent 26, 27, 34

  Gardiner, Brian 32–3

  Garrod, Dorothy 137

  Geike, James 21

  Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, The (Lyell) 18

  global warming see climate change

  Goat’s Hole see Paviland Cave, Wales

  Goldcliff, Wales 158

  Gough, Richard 136–7

  Gough’s Cave see Cheddar Gorge, Somerset

  Gran Dolina, Spain 40–41, 48

  Gravettian culture 120, 124, 181–2

  Great Ice Age, The (Geike) 21

  Great Interglacial see Hoxnian interglacial

  Gulf Stream see Atlantic Heat Conveyor

  Günz glaciation 21, 54, 69

  Gupta, Sanjeev 107

  Haeckel, Ernst 27

  handaxes

  at Boxgrove 63–4

  at Foxhall 82–3

  at Hoxne 3, 84r />
  at Swanscombe 26, 34, 70, 78–9, 81, 86, 95

  and Boucher de Perthes 16–17

  first descriptions 3–4

  manufacture of 94

  and Neanderthals 82

  replaced by 97

  use of 86–9

  Waverley Wood 44

  Happisburgh, Norfolk 42–3, 49, 67

  Harnham, Wiltshire 97

  Harrison, Benjamin 29

  Harrison, Lake 44

  Harvati, Katerina 126

  Heinrich Event 169

  High Lodge, Norfolk 44–5

  Hinton, Martin 32–4

  History of Warwickshire (Dugdale) 2

  Holocene interglacial 21–2, 58, 158, 162

  Holocene Optimum 149

  Homo antecessor 41

  Homo calpicus 23–4

  Homo erectus 27, 35–6, 81, 129, 180

  Homo ergaster 41

  Homo floresiensis 51, 51, 180

  Homo heidelbergensis 27–9, 28, 31, 52, 65, 66, 89, 129

  Homo neanderthalensis see Neanderthal Man

  Homo sapiens 23, 29, 41, 125, 129, see also Cro-Magnon Man

  Howells, Bill 126

  Hoxne, Suffolk 3–4, 58, 84–5

  Hoxnian interglacial

  early humans 86

  map of period 78

  origin of name 59, 68–70, 84

  “presapiens” line 72–3

  vegetation changes 58

  and Westbury 60

  Hughes, McKenny 98

  Humans

  earliest occupation in Britain 47, 50–51, 63, 66, 86

  episodic occupation 90–92, 99, 102–4, 111–12

  out of Africa 124–7

  stone tool usage 95, see also Homo Sapiens

  Humphry, Louise 142

  Hutton, James 9, 10

  Huxley, Thomas 18, 23, 83

  Hyenas 7–8, 8

  Imbrie, John 56, 58

  Ipswichian interglacial 58, 69, 109, 114

  isomers 49–50

  Jacobi, Roger 59, 141, 144, 190–93

  Janetos, Anthony 173–4

  Java Man see Homo erectus

  Johnson, Dr Samuel 1

  Keith, Sir Arthur 29, 32, 34, 72

  Keith, Sir Arthur 29, 32, 34, 72

  Kendrick’s Cave, Wales 157

  Kent’s Cavern 137

  Kent’s Cavern, Devon 11–12, 14, 68, 119, 130

  King, Sir David 164

  King, William 23, 126

 

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