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E-grāmata: Drowning of a Cornish Prehistoric Landscape: Tradition, Deposition and Social Responses to Sea Level Rise

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Between 2018 and 2019, Cornwall Archaeological Unit undertook two projects at Mount’s Bay, Penwith. The first involved the excavation of a Bronze Age barrow and the second, environmental augur core sampling in Marazion Marsh. Both sites lie within an area of coastal hinterland, which has been subject to incursions by rising sea levels. Since the Mesolithic, an area of approximately 1 kilometer in extent between the current shoreline and St Michael’s Mount has been lost to gradually rising sea levels. With current climate change, this process is likely to occur at an increasing rate. Given their proximity, the opportunity was taken to draw the results from the two projects together along with all available existing environmental data from the area.

For the first time, the results from all previous palaeoenvironmental projects in the Mount’s Bay area have been brought together. Evidence for coastal change and sea level rise is discussed and a model for the drowning landscape presented. In addition to modeling the loss of land and describing the environment over time, social responses including the wider context of the Bronze Age barrow and later Bronze Age metalwork deposition in the Mount’s Bay environs are considered. The effects of the gradual loss of land are discussed in terms of how change is perceived, its effects on community resilience, and the construction of social memory and narratives of place.

The volume presents the potential for nationally significant environmental data to survive, which demonstrates the long-term effects of climate change and rising sea levels, and peoples’ responses to these over time.

Explores the progressive social and economic response of local prehistoric communities to sea level rise and environmental change based on evidence from Mount's Bay, Cornwall.
List of Figures and Tables
ix
Authors xi
Contributors xii
Abstract xiii
French Language Abstract xiv
German Language Abstract xv
Acknowledgements xvi
SECTION 1 BACKGROUND
1(14)
1 Dealing with a drowned landscape
3(12)
Andy M. Jones
SECTION 2 EXCAVATIONS AT THE PENZANCE HELIPORT BARROW
15(62)
2 Penzance Heliport barrow: auger survey and excavation 2018
17(30)
Andy M. Jones
Anna Lawson-Jones with Michael J. Allen
3 The pottery and worked stone
47(4)
Henrietta Quinnell
Christina Tsoraki
4 Flint, chert and small pebble assemblage
51(4)
Anna Lawson-Jones
5 The copper alloy ingot
55(4)
Anna Tyacke
with Jens Andersen
6 Palaeo-environmental and palaeo-economic evidence
59(16)
Michael J. Allen
with A.J. Clapham
Nigel Cameron
C.T. Langdon
R.G. Scaife
7 Radiocarbon dating
75(2)
Michael J. Allen
Andy M. Jones
SECTION 3 FIELDWORK AT MARAZION MARSH
77(58)
8 Marzion Marsh: background and fieldwork methodology
79(14)
Michael J. Allen
Andy M. Jones
9 A Mesolithic to modern palaeo-environmental and landscape record
93(32)
Michael J. Allen
with contributions by Nigel Cameron
A.J. Clapham
C.T. Langdon
10 The changing environmental and land-use history of the marsh environs: the environment of the St Michael's Mount hinterland
125(10)
Michael J. Allen
SECTION 4 THE ENVIRONMENTAL, ECONOMIC AND CULTURAL SETTING OF LANDSCAPE: EXCAVATED SITES AND THEIR WIDER LANDSCAPE CONTEXT
135(74)
11 The submerging landscape from prehistory into the Anthropocene
137(10)
Michael J. Allen
12 A landscape of deposition
147(16)
Andy M. Jones
Matthew G. Knight
13 Bronze Age engagements with a liminal space
163(20)
Andy M. Iones
14 Inhabiting a changing landscape: response and reflection
183(22)
Andy M. Jones
Michael J. Allen
15 Gwelen: a drowned landscape reimagined
205(4)
Emma Smith
Bibliography
209(18)
Appendices
227(10)
1 Conservation of the copper alloy ingot fragment
227(1)
Laura Ratcliffe-Warren
2 Borehole logs from Penzance Heliport site
228(9)
Michael J. Allen
Index 237
Andy M. Jones is Projects Manager at Cornwall Archaeological Unit. His research interests include the Neolithic and Bronze Age of western Britain. Major publications include: Preserved in the Peat: An Extraordinary Bronze Age Burial on Whitehorse Hill, Dartmoor, and its Wider Context (2016) and Later Prehistoric Settlement in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly: Evidence from Five Excavations (2021). Michael J. Allen is proprietor of AEA Allen Environmental Archaeology and is one of the UKs leading environmental archaeologists, specialising in geoarchaeology (particularly the analysis of hillwash and colluvium), land snail analysis, prehistoric landscape reconstruction and the management of environmental archaeological projects.