Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T06:18:09.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Cambridge excavations at La Cotte de St Brelade, Jersey—a preliminary report

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2014

C. B. M. McBurney
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Cambridge
P. Callow
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Cambridge

Extract

The following is a preliminary report on excavations undertaken at this site under the aegis of the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology of the University of Cambridge. The work was carried out during a number of seasons over the past ten years, partly as a research project and partly as field training for third year and research students under the direction of C.B.M.McB. To P.C. fell the eventual task of collating and summarizing the extensive stratigraphical observations made by us and by previous excavators, and doing the same for the pollen samples and palaeontological data. Responsibility for the report as a whole is shared, but many others too numerous to thank separately at this stage have contributed basically to the collection and analysis of field and laboratory data. It is hoped that the full results after further field work will provide the material for a detailed monograph. The work would of course have been impossible but for the kind permission of the Société Jersiaise and the active assistance of many of its members on numerous occasions.

The site, the largest and most productive cave or rock-shelter site in the British Isles, was originally made famous by the discovery of a rich Mousterian industry, fauna, and eventually fossil traces of Neanderthal man at the turn of the century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1971

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

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Andersen, S. T., 1961. ‘Vegetation and its Environment in Danmark in the Early Weichselian Glacial’, Danm. Geol. Unders., no. 75.Google Scholar
Beug, H.-J., 1961. Leitfaden der Pollenbestimmung für Mitteleuropa und angrenzende Gebiete, Lieferung 1, G. Fischer, Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Blanc, A. C., 1958. ‘Torre in Pietra, Saccopastore, Monte Circeo. On the Position of the Mousterian Culture in the Pleistocene Sequence of the Rome Area’, in Koenigswald, G. H. R. von, Neanderthal Centenary.Google Scholar
Bordes, F., Laville, H. and Paquereau, M.-M., 1966. ‘Observations sur le Pleistocene Superieur du Gisement de Combe-Grenal (Dordogne)’, Actes de la Soc. Linn. de Bordeaux, (B 10), 103.Google Scholar
Burdo, C., 1960. La Cotte-de-Saint-Brelade, Jersey, British Channel Islands. Excavation of a Pre-Mousterian Horizon, 1950–1958, Société Jersiaise, Jersey.Google Scholar
Butzer, K. W. and Cuerda, J., 1962. ‘Coastal Stratigraphy of Southern Mallorca and its Implications for the Pleistocene Chronology of the Mediterranean Sea’, J. Geol., 70, 396416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Churchill, D. M., 1962. ‘The Stratigraphy of the Mesolithic Sites III and V at Thatcham’, PPS XXXVIII, 362–70.Google Scholar
Dowman, E. A., 1970. Conservation in Field Archaeology, Methuen & Co., London.Google Scholar
Emiliani, C., 1964. ‘Paleotemperature Analysis of the Caribbean Cores A254-BR-C and CP-28’, Bull. Geol. Soc. America, 75, 129–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frenzel, B., 1964. ‘Zur Pollenanalyse von Lössen’, Eiszeit. und Gegen., 15, 539.Google Scholar
Godwin, H. and Godwin, M.E., 1952. ‘Pollen analyses from peat on the shore and coastal plain of Jersey, Channel Islands’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 15 (4), 457.Google Scholar
Iversen, J., 1944. ‘Viscum, Hedera and Ilex as climate indicators’, Geol. Fören. Föhr., 66, 463–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jessen, J. and Milthers, V., 1928. ‘Interglacial freshwater deposits in Jutland and north-west Germany’, Danm. Geol. Unders., II, Raekke, no. 48.Google Scholar
Kelly, M. R., 1964. ‘The Middle Pleistocene of North Birmingham’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 247, 533–92.Google Scholar
Lumley, H. de, 1969. ‘Une Cabane acheuléenne dans la Grotte du Lazaret (Nice)’, Mem. Soc. Préhistorique Francaise, 7.Google Scholar
Lumley-Woodyear, H. de, 1969a. Le Paléolithique inferieur et moyen du Midi Mediterranéen dans son Cadre géologique. I., Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M., 1962. ‘La Cotte de St Brelade. Report on the Cambridge University Excavations’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 18 (2), 225–6.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M., 1963. ‘Report on the Cambridge University Excavations, 1962’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 18 (3), 339–40.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M., 1967. ‘Preliminary Report on the Current Programme of Research at La Cotte de St Brelade’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 19 (3), 222–4.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M., 1968. ‘The cave of Ali Tappeh and the Epi-Palaeolithic of N.E. Iran’, PPS, XXXIV, 368–84.Google Scholar
McBurney, C. B. M., 1969. ‘Second Summary Report of Excavations at La Cotte de St Brelade’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 20 (1), 2931.Google Scholar
Marett, R. R., 1916. ‘The Site, Fauna and Industry of La Cotte de St Brelade, Jersey’, Archaeologia, 67, 75118.Google Scholar
Menke, B. and Ross, P. H., 1967. ‘Der erste Fund von Kieselgur in Schleswig-Holstein bei Brokenlande, südlich von Neumünster’, Eiszeit. und Gegen., 18, 113–26.Google Scholar
Mourant, A. E., 1933. ‘The Raised Beaches and other Terraces of the Channel Islands’, Geol. Mag. 70, 5866.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mourant, A. E., 1935. ‘The Pleistocene Deposits of Jersey’, Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 12, 489–96.Google Scholar
Nicolle, E. T. and Sinel, J., 1912. ‘Report on the Resumed Exploration of “La Cotte”, St Brelade, by the Société Jersiaise’, Man, 12, 158–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paquereau, M. M., 1969. ‘Etude palynologique du Würm I du Pech de l'Azé (Dordogne)’, Quaternaria, 9, 227–32.Google Scholar
Rosholt, J. N., Emiliani, C., Geiss, J., Koczy, F. F. and Wangersky, P. J., 1961. ‘Absolute Dating of Deep-Sea Cores by the Pa231/Th280 Method’, Journal of Geology, 69, 162–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shackleton, N. J., 1969. ‘The Last Interglacial in the Marine and Terrestrial Records’, Proc. Roy. Soc. London (series B), 174, 135–54.Google Scholar
Sparks, B. W. and West, R. G., 1970. ‘Late Pleistocene Deposits at Wretton, Norfolk. I. Ipswichian Interglacial Deposits’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 258, 130.Google ScholarPubMed
Turner, C., 1970. ‘The Middle Pleistocene Deposits at Marks Tey, Essex’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 257, 373437.Google Scholar
Von der Brelie, G., 1954. ‘Transgression und moorbildung im letzen Interglazial’, Mitt. geol. (St) Inst. Hamburg, 23, 111.Google Scholar
Watts, W. A., 1959. ‘Interglacial Deposits at Kilbeg and Newtown, Co. Waterford’, Proc. Roy. Irish Acad., 60 B, 79134.Google Scholar
Wernert, P., 1957. Stratigraphie Paléontologique et Préhistorique des Sediments Quaternaires d'Alsace, Achenheim.Google Scholar
West, R. G., 1957. ‘Interglacial Deposits at Bobbitshole, Ipswich’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 241, 131.Google Scholar
West, R. G., Lambert, C. A. and Sparks, B. W., 1964. ‘Interglacial Deposits at Ilford, Essex’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 247, 185212.Google Scholar
West, R. G. and Sparks, B. W., 1960. ‘Coastal Interglacial Deposits of the English Channel’, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (series B), 243, 95133.Google Scholar
Zeuner, F. E., 1940. ‘The Age of Neanderthal Man, with Notes on the Cotte de St Brelade, Jersey, C.I.’, London Univ. Inst. of Archaeol. Occasional Papers, 3.Google Scholar
Zeuner, F. E., 1946. Dating the Past, London.Google Scholar