Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T04:48:07.844Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A grave error concerning the demise of ‘Hunstanton Woman’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Peter G. Hoare
Affiliation:
Sedimentology and Palaeobiology Laboratory, Division of Geography, Anglia Polytechnic University, East Road, Cambridge CB1 1PT, England
Caroline S. Sweet
Affiliation:
Sedimentology and Palaeobiology Laboratory, Division of Geography, Anglia Polytechnic University, East Road, Cambridge CB1 1PT, England

Extract

‘Hunstanton Woman’, a skeleton found in 1897 within glacial gravels at Hunstanton on the east English coast, has now been carbon-dated. She turns out to be yet another intrusive burial, rather than an ‘Ice Age’ person.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anon, . 1897. Strange discovery at Hunstanton. Remains of a primeval Briton(?), Eastern Daily Press Thursday 2 September 1897: 5.Google Scholar
Beckett, S.C. 1977. The Bog, Roos (Site 35) Late-glacial and Flandrian vegetational history, in Catt, J.A. (ed.), International Union for Quaternary Research X Congress 1977 Guidebook for Excursion C7: Yorkshire and Lincolnshire: 42, 44–6. Norwich: Geo Abstracts.Google Scholar
Burkitt, M.C. 1931. Six interesting flint implements now in Cambridge, Antiquaries Journal 11: 55#x2013;7.Google Scholar
Ellis, H. 1993. Jonathan Hutchinson (1828–1913), Journal of Medical Biography 1: 1116.Google Scholar
Gowlett, J.A.J., Hedges, R.E.M., Law, I.A. & Perry, C.. 1987. Netherlands River Bed Series, in Radiocarbon dates from the Oxford AMS system: Archaeometry dateiist 5, Archaeometry 29: 125–55.Google Scholar
Hoare, P.G., Gale, S.J. & Madgett, P.A.. Forthcoming. The Late Quaternary glacial history of east–central England and the adjoining North Sea Basin.Google Scholar
Hutchinson, H. 1946. Jonathan Hutchinson life and letters. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Jackson, J.F. 1910. The rocks of Hunstanton and its neighbourhood. London: Premier Press.Google Scholar
Jukes-Browne, A.J. 1879. On the southerly extension of the Hessle Boulder-clay in Lincolnshire, Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 35: 397420.Google Scholar
Keith, A. 1913. Abstract of a report of fragmentary human skeleton found in an undisturbed deposit of gravel at Hunstanton. Unpublished paper, Hunterian Museum, Royal College of Surgeons of England, London.Google Scholar
Maynard, G. 1951. List of the fragments of ‘Hunstanton Woman’. Unpublished paper, Ipswich Museum file 1931.40.Google Scholar
Moir, J.R. 1916. Pre-boulder clay man, Nature, London 98: 109.Google Scholar
Moir, J.R. 1930. Flint implements of Upper Palaeolithic types from glacial deposits in Norfolk, in Moir, J.R. & Burchell, J.P.T., Flint implements of Upper Palaeolithic facies from beneath the uppermost Boulder Clay of Norfolk and Yorkshire, Antiquaries Journal 10: 359–71.Google Scholar
Moir, J.R. 1931. Further discoveries of flint implements in the Brown Boulder Clay of north-west Norfolk, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society of East Angiia 6: 306–15.Google Scholar
Moir, J.R. & Keith, A.. 1912. An account of the discovery and characters of a human skeleton found beneath a stratum of chalky boulder clay near Ipswich, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 42: 345–79.Google Scholar
Newton, E.T. 1898. Palaeolithic Man, Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association 15: 246–63.Google Scholar
Penny, L.F., Coope, G.R. & Catt, J.A.. 1969. Age and insect fauna of the Dimlington Silts, east Yorkshire, Nature, London 224: 65–7.Google Scholar
Seeley, H.G. 1866. A sketch of the gravels and drift of the Fenland, Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 22: 470–80.Google Scholar
‘SNAP’. 1897. Daily gossip, The Norfolk Daily Standard Thursday 2 September 1897: 2.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M. & Pearson, G.W.. 1993. High-precision bidecadal calibration of the radiocarbon time scale, AD 1950–500 BC and 2500–6000 BC, Radiocarbon 35: 123.Google Scholar
Swanton, E.W. 1913. Letter to Dr Arthur Keith. Unpublished paper, Hunterian Museum, Royal College of Surgeons of England, London.Google Scholar
Tucker, W.T. 1898. On some human remains found in the gravel pit, near the railway station, at New Hunstanton, Transactions of the Leicester Literary and Philosophical Society 4: 521–6.Google Scholar
Van Der Plight, J. 1993. The Groningen radiocarbon calibration program, Radiocarbon 35: 231–7.Google Scholar
West, R.G. 1993. On the history of the Late Devensian Lake Sparks in southern Fenland, Cambridgeshire, England, Journal of Quaternary Science 8: 217–34.Google Scholar
Whitaker, W. 1883. Excursion to Hunstanton, Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association 8: 133–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitaker, W. & Jukes-Browne, A.J.. 1899. The geology of the borders of The Wash: including Boston and Hunstanton (Explanation of Sheet 69 Old Series), Memoirs of the Geological Survey. England and Wales. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Wood, S.V. & Harmer, F.W.. 1872a. An outline of the geology of the Upper Tertiaries of East Anglia, in Supplement to the monograph of the Crag Mollusca, with descriptions of shells from the Upper Tertiaries of the east of England III: Univalves and bivalves. With an introductory outline of the geology of the same district, and map. London: Palaeontographical Society.Google Scholar
Wood, S.V. & Harmer, F.W.. 1872b. Supplement to the Mollusca from the Crag; being descriptions of additional species, and remarks on species previously described (Gasteropoda and Pteropoda), in Supplement to the monograph of the Crag Mollusca, with descriptions of shells from the Upper Tertiaries of the east of England III: Univalves and bivalves. With an introductory outline of the geology of the same district, and map. London: Palaeontographical Society.Google Scholar
Wood, S.V. & Harmer, F.W.. 1874. Supplement to the Mollusca from the Crag; being descriptions of additional species, and remarks on species previously described (Bivalvia), in Supplement to the monograph of the Crag Mollusca, with descriptions of shells from the Upper Tertiaries of the east of England III: Univalves and bivalves. With an introductory outline of the geology of the same district, and map. London: Palaeontographical Society.Google Scholar
Woodward, B.B. 1883. Note on the drift deposits at Hunstanton, Norfolk, Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association 8: 97101.Google Scholar
Wright, W.B. 1939. Tools and the man. London: Bell.Google Scholar
Wymer, J.J. 1986. James Reid Moir and the Prehistoric Society, Suffolk Archaeology and History Newsletter 22: 1011.Google Scholar