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Excavations in a Dry Valley in Beer, S.E. Devon
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2013
Extract
The object of this paper is to make known the existence of a wide-spread implementiferous deposit hitherto unknown in Devonshire, although comparable discoveries have been made in East Anglia by Mr. Reid Moir and in the Thames Valley by Mr. J. P. T. Burchell.
A brief preliminary statement appeared in Vol. VII, part 2, in “Notes on Excavations,” which reported our finding a number of flint implements which lay to a depth of 12 ft. below the surface of a dry valley in Bovey Lane, Beer.
These specimens were revealed in an artificial cutting made in search of water, when only the faces of the sections could be examined, but by aid of a grant from the Percy Sladen Memorial Fund, we were later enabled to carry out two seasons of excavation.
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- Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1934
References
page 355 note 1 Journal Royal Anthropological Institute, Vol. XLVII, pp. 367–412Google Scholar, and other papers.
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It is, however, worth mentioning that, whereas the evidence for Palaeolithic pottery in Europe rests upon evidence both exiguous and disputed, that derived from the excavation of a very considerable number of sealed cave deposits in western Europe points decisively in the opposite direction.—Editor.
page 362 note 2 Proc. Devon Archaeo. Exploration Soc., Vol. I, pt. 1, p. 10Google Scholar.
page 362 note 3 There were also a few flakes and implements suggesting a greater age than can be claimed for either Deposit or Plateau industries, but they are outside the scope of this paper.
page 363 note 1 Proc. Devon Arohaeo. Explor. Soc., Vol. I, pt. 1, pp. 11–12Google Scholar.
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page 363 note 3 The average “Clactonian” angle from the Deposit proved to be 120°.
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