Amongst ethnographically documented hunter-gatherers, landscapes are enculturated: they have meanings conferred upon them. The meanings derive from a mix of personal experience, social history, tradition, ritual, and cosmology. They are constantly reproduced and revised and influence the whole breadth of activities undertaken in the landscape. We should assume the same for the early Holocene landscapes of Mesolithic Britain (Zvelebil Reference Zvelebil, Larsson, Kindgren, Knutsson, Loeffler and Åkerlund2003) – a view with which I am confident all archaeologists would concur. As with studies of the Blackfoot Indians of the North-western Plains of the USA, and to paraphrase Oetelaar (Reference Oetelaar2016, 42), while archaeologists may predominately interpret Mesolithic archaeology as representing subsistence and settlement strategies adapted to the early Holocene environments, the Mesolithic people themselves are likely to have also been addressing historical, social, and cosmological imperatives. This is widely acknowledged: Mesolithic, and hopefully Neolithic, archaeology is long past the time when Bradley (Reference Bradley1984, 11) thought it appropriate, or at least entertaining, to claim that Mesolithic people were considered to only have ecological relationships with hazelnuts – a claim that was inaccurate at the time (as Bradley was well aware).
The meanings once conferred on the early Holocene landscapes are entirely lost to us: we can neither reconstruct Mesolithic cosmology nor attain the chronological resolution required for reconstructing social history. Nevertheless, we cannot ignore the strong likelihood that early Holocene landscapes were enculturated and replete with meaning for Mesolithic people. How might this have influenced the archaeological record? What archaeological evidence might provide an insight into the nature and/or process of landscape enculturation?
While the tendency has been to look for the unusual and exotic, such as evidence for ritual deposition, the most significant evidence might be both ubiquitous and seemingly mundane: fireplaces. I use ‘fireplace’ as a generic term to encompass archaeological features described as hearths, areas of burning, ovens, fire-pits, and so forth. Fireplaces in Mesolithic Britain are predominately interpreted as evidence for cooking, potentially involving a variety of methods such as steaming, baking, and roasting on hot stones (Milner Reference Milner2009), as is the case for those from elsewhere in Europe (eg, the Netherlands, Peters & Niekus Reference Peters, Niekus, Achard-Corompt, Ghesquière and Riquier2017; Finland, Sikk Reference Sikk2016). Cooking was certainly an important function of fireplaces, and needs further investigation, along with the use of fireplaces for preparing resins, heating flint, and supporting other functional tasks whether by the heat or light they provide (Warren Reference Warren2005). In this contribution, however, I will focus on the social role of the fireplace within Mesolithic communities.
Encultured Landscapes
The landscapes of ethnographically documented hunter-gatherers have multiple layers of meanings intricately bound together. Archaeologists concerned with the Mesolithic and Neolithic are acutely aware of such enculturation and have often cited ethnographic examples potentially relevant to these periods. Tilley (Reference Tilley1994), for example, describes the enculturation of landscapes by Australian aborigines, the Mistassini Cree and Koyukon of North America, and cultivators from Melanesia and the American South-west, before reflecting on the Mesolithic and Neolithic of Pembrokeshire, the Black Mountains, and Cranborne Chase. Bradley (Reference Bradley2000) framed his discussion of the archaeology of natural places and Neolithic archaeology in Britain by a focus on Saami hunters and reindeer herders, while Zvelebil (Reference Zvelebil, Larsson, Kindgren, Knutsson, Loeffler and Åkerlund2003) looked towards the Kets of western Siberia, and the Nukak of Amazonia. The edited volumes by Jordan (Reference Jordan2010) and Lovis & Whallon (Reference Lovis and Whallon2016) contain numerous ethnographic studies of potential value to Mesolithic archaeologists concerned with the enculturation of landscape. The challenge such studies provide, however, is the remarkable diversity of beliefs held by hunter-gatherers about their landscapes, many of which provide vivid demonstrations of human cognitive fluidity (Mithen Reference Mithen1996) as the domains of nature, society, and material culture blend together in quite remarkable ways.
No single ethnographic analogy will ever be sufficient for Mesolithic Britain consisting of more than 5000 years of hunter-gatherers living in diverse environmental settings between the end of the Pleistocene (c. 11,650 bp) and arrival of the Neolithic (c. 6000 bp). We might however, draw some generalisations from the ethnographic record to guide our archaeological studies. One common theme is that supernatural beings created distinctive features of the landscape and continue to have agency in the world (eg, for the Walpiri of Australia, Meggitt Reference Meggitt1986; the Blackfoot Indians of North America, Oetelaar Reference Oetelaar2016; and the Khanty of Siberia, Jordan Reference Jordan2003). Human experience, memory, and oral history often provide further layers of meaning, with features of the landscape becoming associated with memories of recent events (such as the trees of the Central Kalahari for the San, Takada Reference Takada2016). Landscapes can be deliberately and permanently marked, such as by pictographs or cairns, or temporally modified by alignments of stones and branches to alert others to specific events; they can be unintentionally altered by the creation of tracks via the repeated use of routeways (Lovis & Whallon 2016). The naming of places is pervasive and can be paramount (Basso Reference Basso1996; Jordan Reference Jordan2003). Names can relate to any type of meaning: cosmological, ritual, spiritual, historic events in memory, landscape characteristics, and resource availability.
While living and acting within an enculturated environment, hunter-gatherers also adapt to resource distributions: the ecological structure of the environment provides a further level of meaning, one inextricably linked with social history and cosmology. In this regard, Davies et al. (Reference Davies, Robb and Ladbrook2005) should reconsider their suggestion that ecological and cultural interpretations of Mesolithic activity are opposed because this fails to appreciate the true complexity of the human mind that can accommodate views seemingly contradictory to a modern western perspective (Mithen Reference Mithen1996). Moreover, mythological stories and ritual activities may contain critical information about managing infrequent crashes in specific foods (Minc Reference Minc1986). The recounting of journeys, real or imaginary, and of named places within stories and ceremonies submits ‘anchor points’ to memory, essential for maintaining social networks in what Lovis (Reference Lovis2016) describes as ‘big rough spaces with few people’. Story-telling among the Agta hunter-gatherers coordinates group behaviour and facilitates cooperation, this being consistent with studies of other hunter-gatherers (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Schlaepfer, Major, Dyble, Page, Thompson, Chaudhary, Salali, Mace, Astete, Ngales, Vinicius and Migliano2017).
As hunter-gatherers move across their landscapes, different types of meaning rise to the fore as particular topographic features, views, or human-made marks (such as a past campsite or a pictograph) are encountered. Such meanings might be cosmological, historical, ecological, or from personal memory, and are then replaced by others as the viewpoint changes (Lovis & Whallon Reference Lovis and Whallon2016). The flow of perceptions and meanings will vary between individuals, reflecting their age, experience, and interests. The different concerns of men and women can lead to ‘gendered landscapes’ (eg, Funk Reference Funk, Whallon, Lovis and Hitchcock2011), while people may have differential access to sacred knowledge about the landscape (Whallon & Lovis Reference Whallon, Lovis and Whallon2016).
The manner in which enculturation starts is of particular interest to those archaeologists who study human dispersals into previously unoccupied landscapes (Rockman & Steele Reference Rockman and Steele2003). The Kesyehot’ine group of the Chipewyan hunter-fishers undertook this in three stages when they moved southwards from the central Canadian subarctic into the boreal forest in the late 18th century (Jarvenpa & Brumback Reference Jarvenpa and Brumbach2016). They initially learned to use prominent natural features as travel corridors and wayfinding guides, gradually giving them names and thereby endowing them with cultural significance. A second stage involved marking the landscape with their own trails, animal traps, and structures. Some of these had spiritual dimensions. The iuse, for instance, was a trap for catching lynx using a baited stake within a horseshoe enclosure. The placing of the stake was a ritual act, with the iuse carrying a complex symbolic message about livelihood, cosmological power, and inter-dependency between humans and animals. A third stage of landscape enculturation involved the emergence of a mortuary-based pilgrimage complex. Within eight generations, c. 200 years, the Kesyehot’ine had ‘moved into a different area and through lived experience made it their own’ (Jarvenpa & Brumback Reference Jarvenpa and Brumbach2016, 18).
The Mesolithic
Mesolithic archaeologists appreciate that early Holocene hunter-gatherers created and lived within encultured landscapes, even if they do not always make this explicit. Cummings (Reference Cummings and Young2000, 93) suggests that Mesolithic sites in Pembrokeshire ‘were meaningfully situated for a variety of reasons relating to the myths, metaphors and memories that were associated with the lived-in and active landscape’. When writing about the Mesolithic in Scotland, Warren (Reference Warren2005, 117) describes landscapes as being ‘redolent with meaning being generated by the activities of spirits, animals and other agencies’, while Lillie (Reference Lillie2015) seeks to provide a ‘social narrative’ for Mesolithic lifeways in Wales. Davies et al. (Reference Davies, Robb and Ladbrook2005), drawing analogy with the Koyukon of Alaska and Ixtepejano of Mexico, suggest Mesolithic hunter-gatherers might have viewed areas of their landscape with fear and made paths and clearings to avoid malevolent forces. More generally, there has been an emphasis on social accounts in which ‘landscapes were created and reproduced through the habitual, routine practices of people’s lives’ and how ‘interactions with plants, animals and the landscape more generally are structured by cultural rules’ (Taylor Reference Taylor2018, 494, citing Conneller Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller, Milner and Woodman2005; Edmonds Reference Edmonds1997; McFadyen Reference McFadyen, Conneller and Warren2006).
These are all compelling ideas – but finding supporting evidence is challenging. Attempts to do so have drawn on the unusual types of evidence from the Mesolithic, those for which adaptationist interpretations appear insufficient. The shell middens on Oronsay are unusual because of their number, size, and the presence of human remains (Mellars Reference Mellars1987). Both Pollard (Reference Pollard2000) and Cummings (Reference Cummings, Larsson, Kindgren, Knutsson, Loeffler and Åkerlund2003) have drawn on these features to invoke the presence of ancestors and social gatherings. The unique combination of numerous beads, a figurine, and prominent topography at Nab Head in Wales (David Reference David2007) led Tilley (Reference Tilley1994, 84) to claim these provide ‘a tantalizing glimpse of the symbolic dimensions of social being-in-the-landscape during the Mesolithic’. The unusual evidence at Star Carr – worked antler frontlets, accumulations of harpoons and stone tools suggesting deliberate deposition – has been subject to a multitude of interpretations that refer to various types of encultured landscapes and the process of enculturation (eg, Conneller Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller, Milner and Woodman2005; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Conneller, Milner, Elliott, Little, Knight, Bamforth, Milner, Conneller and Taylor2018). Chatterton (Reference Chatterton, Conneller and Warren2006, 104), for instance, suggests the deposition of red antler harpoons into the shallow water of the lake edge ‘may have involved actions which were designed to offer respect to animals killed, either through a taboo against reuse or in the regeneration and maintenance of the animal kingdom from which the slain animals came’. While arguments based on the ‘unusual’ can be persuasive, the dilemma they present is that the social and symbolic is detached from the everyday life of the Mesolithic as represented by the vast majority of its archaeological evidence.
Warren (Reference Warren2005), Spikins et al. (Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010), and MacInnes (2016) have indicated a way forward by drawing attention to the social significance of fireplaces. Warren refers to fire as a symbolic referent and how the ‘social world would have revolved around small pockets of light’ (Warren Reference Warren2005, 127), while Spikins et al. (Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010, 189) drew on ethnographic analogy to explain the ‘embedded nature of fire within daily social and spiritual life’ in the Mesolithic. MacInness describes fire as a socialising instrument, suggesting it can enhance the creation of memories. She writes how ‘fire may have been seen to hold life-sustaining properties embodied in warmth and light, bringing forth sociality and acting to (re)make the group through its role in everyday practices that reaffirmed these shared understandings’ (MacInnes 2016, 51–2).
Fireplaces, Night-Time Talk, and Enculturing the Landscape
Following the lead of Warren, Spikins et al., and MacInness, we should consolidate their views and draw further insights from the ethnographic record regarding the social use of fire. The following examples are illustrative regarding four key roles played by fire in social relations with particular regard to landscape enculturation.
Fire provides warmth, light, and creates the emotional and physiological states that are especially receptive to new ideas and information
This is illustrated by Wiessner’s (Reference Wiessner2014) study of firelight talk among the Ju/’hoansi Bushmen, from which she generalises to all hunter-gatherers. Following meticulous recording and analysis of conversations, Wiessner identified day-time talk to be about economic matters and social relations. When seated around the fire at night, however, the Ju/’hoansi told enthralling stories and tales about people in the recent and distant past, and engaged in singing, dancing, and talk of the supernatural. Wiessner explained why there is such difference:
‘Sufficiently bright firelight represses the production of melatonin and energizes at a time when little economically productive work can be done; time is ample. In hot seasons, the cool of the evening releases pent up energy; in cold seasons, people huddle together. Fireside gatherings are often, although not always, composed of people of mixed sexes and ages. The moon and starlit skies awaken imagination of the supernatural, as well as a sense of vulnerability to malevolent spirits, predators, and antagonists countered by security in numbers. Body language is dimmed by firelight and awareness of self and others is reduced. Facial expressions—flickering with the flames—are either softened, or in the case of fear or anguish, accentuated. Agendas of the day are dropped while small children fall asleep in the laps of kin. Whereas time structures interactions by day because of economic exigencies, by night social interactions structure time and often continue until relationships are right. Foragers make use of day-time efficiently and night-time effectively’. (Wiessner Reference Wiessner2014, 1402)
Not restricting herself to the Ju/’hoansi Bushmen, Wiessner reviewed evidence from hunter-gatherers around the world. She found striking commonalities with regard to night-time activities, to conclude that:
‘When the night appears to have really mattered was for the extension of cultural institutions over time and space to link individuals from different bands into larger “imagined communities” beyond village limits, an enterprise that involved complex cognition and time-consuming information transfer. In most hunter-gatherer societies, firelit hours drew aggregations of individuals who were out foraging by day and provided time for ventures into such virtual communities, whether human or supernatural, via stories and ritual. Stories conveyed unifying cosmologies and charters for rules and rites governing behavior. These stories also conveyed information about the nature of individuals in the present and recent past, their experiences and feelings, as well as factual knowledge about long-distance networks, kinship, and land tenure. Stories told by firelight put listeners on the same emotional wavelength, elicited understanding, trust, and sympathy, and built positive reputations for qualities like humor, congeniality, and innovation’. (Wiessner Reference Wiessner2014, 1403)
Experimental studies provide a physiological basis to these ethnographic observations. These have demonstrated that sitting by fires ‘induces relaxation as part of a multisensory, absorptive and social experience’ (Lynn Reference Lynn2014, 983). As such, the warmth, light, and aromas of the fire would have created emotional and physiological states that were especially receptive to new ideas and information.
Fire provides a means to engage with the spirit world
The hunters and herders of northern taiga landscapes intuitively appear to provide better analogies for the British Mesolithic than the Ju/’hoansi Bushmen. The fireplace has a central role in the process by which the Evenki of Siberia turn tracts of forest into cultural landscapes imbued with ancestral and spiritual meanings. Lavrillier (Reference Lavrillier2010, 221), writes that:
‘The hearth, located at the centre of the dwelling, surrounded by logs or stones, or occasionally marked by the presence of a larger schist slab, is considered to be a vector of communication linking the world of living people with the lower world domain of the dead, and with the ‘souls to be born’ who are in the upper world’.
Between spring and autumn a second fire is kept burning outside the tent, which serves the same purpose.
The Selk’nam of Tierra del Fuego have also been proposed as an effective analogy for Mesolithic Britain (Manzi & Spikins Reference Manzi and Spikins2008; Spikins et al. Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010). For these hunter-gatherers fire was connected to the spirit world, and was especially important in male initiation ceremonies. Spirits such as Ksohort emerged from the fire and rituals took place with the light of a huge bonfire. Fire enabled people to move between the living and the spirit worlds (Manzi & Spikins Reference Manzi and Spikins2008).
Amongst the !Kung of Nyae Nyae, special fireplaces are constructed for ritual activities, such as within the centre of a dance circle. Marshall (Reference Marshall1976, 91) describes the following rites as requiring special fires: the Menarcheal Rite, the Rite of the First Kill (performed when a boy kills his first large game animal), another hunting rite, a rite for a novice medicine man, n/um/k’’xau (‘owner of medicine), and the rite of a child’s first haircut.
Fire and smoke have transformative properties
It is the nature of fire to transform material, by cooking foodstuffs to make then edible, by heating flint to change its knapping properties, to melt wax when making resins. Fire and smoke can also transform the non-material properties of objects and living things. The Siberian Iukagir hunters consider the fire contained in small metal stoves to be most important part of the interiors of their cabins, cabins having replaced tents in the 1960s (Willerslev Reference Willerslev2010). The fire transforms animal flesh from the game they hunt into a foodstuff by de-subjectifying what had, up until then, been a person. Their story-telling around the stove is particular interesting because of its minimalist character: ‘the stories are short, uneven and often incomplete … one has to guess the meaning according to the general context of the story or according to previous sentences, or by deciphering the bodily gestures of the speaker’ (Willersley 2010, 63). Amongst the Chukchis reindeer herders, the hearth, its charcoal, and smoke, protect family members, perpetuate the reindeer herd, and enable the temporary appropriation of the piece of landscape in which the people were currently dwelling (Vaté Reference Vaté2010). The smoke maintains the virility of the reindeer. This can only be guaranteed, however, by smoke from particular types of wood and so the hearths are regular cleaned out to avoid burning material that might have the opposite effect.
The fireplace is a means to reproduce and reaffirm social relationships and values
For the Selk’nam, the making of a fireplace took precedence over the construction of a shelter when at a new camping place (Spikins et al. Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010, 186). The practical tasks that made use of fire, such as keeping warm, cooking food, and preparing tools, merged seamlessly with the social and symbolic uses for fire and the fireplace. Although Selk’nam fireplaces were often no more than a slightly shallow pit or even flat on the ground, they symbolised social cooperation, the fire providing a constant social, metaphorical, and ideological presence in Selk’nam life (Spikins et al. Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010, 186).
The Kung of Nyae Nyae also prioritised making fire over building shelters at a new encampment (Marshall Reference Marshall1976, 79). For them:
‘The clearest visible indication of a family’s location is the fire. Always, summer and winter, every nuclear family has its fire, which is kept burning all night. The fire is the nuclear family’s home, its gathering place, its rightful place to be. In a way, a fire is more of an unchanging home than is a house or a plot of ground from which a family might depart…fires are constant – the shelters are whims’ (Marshall Reference Marshall1976, 84–6)
The !Kung construct and reproduce their social relationships via the spatial arrangement of their fireplaces and of people around them. The fires of nuclear families that compose an extended family are always positioned near to each other rather than being dispersed amongst those of other families in the encampment. From the age of 8 or 9, boys and girls sleep at fires apart from those of their parents. Several boys sleep together at a boys’ fire; the girls will sleep either with a widowed grandmother or some other widow. At the family fire, men will sit on one side and women on the other (Marshall Reference Marshall1976).
Summary
Drawing on such ethnographic studies, it is apparent that the activities around fireplaces – story-telling, singing, dancing, ritual, engaging with the supernatural, some of which are embedded within the otherwise practical tasks of cooking and tool making – played a key role in the on-going enculturation of hunter-gatherer landscapes. It was primarily during night-time, fire-lit exchanges that memories about past events and the social significance of places within the landscapes were reinforced and shared with others, that origin myths were retold, cultural rules were strengthened, and news about the natural world was shared.
There may have been no intent and no restriction in scale. Landscape enculturation may have been an intended outcome of large social gatherings that involved ceremony, ritual and special fires as large as the Tlingit fires that blazed 6–7 ft (c. 2.1–2.4 m) high over 4 days on the Pacific North-west coast as the elders recounted their stories (Wiessner Reference Wiessner2014). Landscape enculturation would have also arisen from the informal chatter of a few people seated around glowing embers that might have been constructed to provide a little warmth and light.
The Use of Fire in the Mesolithic
In light of the role of fire for cooking food and supporting a range of practical tasks, the widespread evidence of fire at Mesolithic sites is not surprising. Prior to considering the social role of fireplaces, we should note that fire was also used as a means of landscape management, as evident from microscopic charcoal within sediment cores associated with vegetation change. This provides a further type of landscape enculturation, especially when we note the potential symbolic role of trees (Moore Reference Moore, Larsson, Kindgren, Knutsson, Loeffler and Åkerlund2003).
The idea of fire-management in the British Mesolithic was initially proposed by Mellars (Reference Mellars1976) and then developed with further evidence by Edwards (Reference Edwards, Vermeesch and Van Peer1990), Zvelebil (Reference Zvelebil1994), and Simmons (Reference Simmons1996), among others. This has led to a useful debate about differentiating between naturally induced fires, such as from lightning strikes, and intentional fire-setting (eg, Tipping Reference Tipping, Pollard and Morrison1996; Reference Tipping2008; Bishop et al. Reference Bishop, Church and Rowley-Conwy2015). There are several persuasive examples of the deliberate use of fire in the British Mesolithic, such as its use for burning reed swamp at Star Carr (Mellars & Dark Reference Mellars and Dark1998), maintaining pines within primary deciduous woodland in Ireland (Bradshaw et al. Reference Bradshaw, Tolonen, Tolonen, Clark, Cachier, Goldammer and Stocks1997), and managing hazel woodland at Loch an’t Suidhe on the Isle of Mull (Edwards et al. Reference Edwards, Langdon and Sugden2007). Arguments that are more speculative include the use of fire for managing oaks and acorn production (Mason Reference Mason2000).
Ethnographic studies of fire-stick farming by Australian Aborigines suggested diverse motivations including signalling, the regeneration of plant foods, flushing out prey, and extending habitable areas (Jones Reference Jones2012). Drawing on ethnographic analogies from North and Central America, Davies et al. (Reference Davies, Robb and Ladbrook2005) proposed a ‘social aspect’ of woodland clearance, suggesting its use to create buffer zones around settlements for protection from a woodland perceived as malevolent. While that particular argument might be countered by the widespread view amongst hunter-gatherers of a benevolent ‘giving environment’ (Bird-David Reference Bird-David1990), it would not be surprising if accounts of burning events, along with naturally-induced fires, had entered the memories and stories of Mesolithic people and played a significant role in landscape enculturation. As Moore (Reference Moore, Larsson, Kindgren, Knutsson, Loeffler and Åkerlund2003, 141) proposed, the human interaction with trees was likely imbued with ritual and symbolism.
Mesolithic Fireplaces
The majority of Mesolithic sites contain burnt artefacts, charred hazelnut shells, and, less frequently, burnt bone, indicating that fires had once been utilised. Exceptions are rare. The absence of burnt material within the extensive collections from Waun Fignen Fellen, south Wales, interpreted by Barton et al. (Reference Barton, Berridge, Walker and Bevins1995) as indicating a ‘persistent place’, is surprising, and might simply be a chance consequence of the location of excavation trenches. At many sites, burnt material is dispersed, with no evident concentrations. This might reflect an uncontrolled use of fire on-site to clean up refuse, or that the fireplaces themselves have left no direct archaeological trace. Sergant et al. (Reference Sergant, Crombe and Perdaen2006) have noted that ‘invisible’ hearths are characteristic of Mesolithic sites across north-west Europe and suggest this arises from a combination of the effectiveness of surface hearths – those without pits or stone structures – and post-depositional processes including trampling, water action, bioturbation, and erosion. Indeed, the fuel within a fireplace might burn to ash and then be blown or washed away leaving no archaeological trace. The ethnographic record is replete with examples in which diverse and complex economic and social activities revolve around fireplaces that are no more than surface hearths or shallow scrapes in the ground that would go undetected archaeologically.
Table 1 summarises the evidence from a sample of Mesolithic sites where the specific location of a fireplace has been proposed (Fig. 1). This sample comes from across Britain and throughout the Mesolithic period, although there is no attempt to provide a chronological distribution in light of the rarity of secure radiocarbon dates. Three categories have been used for the evidence:
1. Concentrations of burnt material and/or sediment that have been interpreted as the former presence of a fireplace (eg, Fig. 2);
2. Pits or natural depressions that contain burnt material/sediment (eg, Fig. 3);
3. Stone structures either enclosing or within an area of burning (eg, Figs 4 & 5).
It is reasonable to assume that the majority of the fireplaces in Table 1 had been used for cooking food and other practical activities. Some may have been used during day-light hours alone, and hence not been locations for the types of night-time fireside talk described by Wiessner (Reference Wiessner2014). Some general observations about the data-set can be observed.
Inconsistent terminology, descriptions, and limited ability to identify the size of the past from its residues
There is an absence of both shared terminology and methodology for describing such features. Terms such as fireplace, hearth, and fire-pit are ill-defined and appear inter-changeable, while the variation with which such features are described compromises effective comparisons. This is partly a consequence of our limited understanding concerning the formation of the archaeological evidence for fireplaces. When faced with a well-defined cluster of burnt material such as at Bexhill (Fig. 2), we have little idea of the scale of fire from which this might have derived. Does it reflect a transitory fire used by just one or two people, or might it derive from a more substantial fire used as the focal point for a social gathering? Similarly, one might ask about the nature of the fire – its duration and fuel – required to create a deposit such in the hearth-pit at Howick (Fig. 3). The need for systematic programmes of experimental archaeology, building on work undertaken by Score and Mithen (Reference Score and Mithen2000), Sergant et al. (Reference Sergant, Crombe and Perdaen2006), and Lejay et al. (Reference Lejay, Alexis, Quénéa, Sellami and Bon2016) is evident.
Fireplaces can become spatially distributed
Clusters of fire-cracked stones, such as at Goldcliff, might arise from hot stones having been removed from a fireplace for use elsewhere and then deposited away from the fireplace itself. Similarly, a concentration of burned bone might have arisen from the removal of cooked meat for consumption away from the fireplace. We can be more confident that discrete concentrations of burnt flint indicate the locations of fireplaces in light of experimental evidence indicating flint artefacts only become burnt when in direct contact with the fire itself (Sergant et al. Reference Sergant, Crombe and Perdaen2006) and the unlikelihood they would be moved. Mixed concentrations of burnt material, whether on the surface or in pits, might be hearth sweepings rather than the fireplace itself. The midden-related sites on Oronsay and at Morton have pits containing likely hearth sweepings, while both Mount Sandel and Cnoc Coig have small pits close to the fireplaces into which burnt stones were placed.
Constructed fireplaces are rare in the archaeological record
Despite the evidence for concentrations of burnt material, that for constructed fireplaces is surprisingly rare, by which I mean fires made within pits and/or with stone structures. Fireplaces within a stone surround are strikingly rare. Differentiating between stones used to construct a fireplace and those heated within a fireplace for use in cooking, and possibly taken away from the fire, is often difficult. Any one stone might have played both roles, and hence a stone built fireplace might become entirely dismantled by the end of a cooking event. Those present are primarily from northern Britain: in Scotland and the Pennines, with outliers at Hawcombe, Somerset, and Wawcott IV, Berkshire. The limited evidence for constructed fireplaces at Star Carr is notable in light of the interpretations for ritual at this location, presence of wood platforms, and the extensive area of excavation (Conneller Reference Conneller2004; Reference Conneller, Milner and Woodman2005; Chatterton Reference Chatterton, Conneller and Warren2006; Milner et al. Reference Milner, Conneller and Taylor2018). This matches the absence of substantial-sized dwelling structures at Star Carr when compared with other Mesolithic sites (Mithen & Wicks Reference Mithen and Wicks2018), further indicating the extent to which Star Carr is anomalous for the British Mesolithic.
The most substantial fireplaces are found within structures
The most substantial fireplaces are those within structures, notably at Mount Sandel and Howick, that have been referred to as ‘pit-houses’ (Waddington & Bonsall Reference Waddington and Bonsall2016, 216). As Waddington (Reference Waddington, Ashton and Harris2015) argued, Howick and Mount Sandel might relate to a period of secondary colonisation of northern Britain, and hence the structures and fireside activities might have been key to the initial stages of landscape enculturation, such as those described above for the Kesyehot’ine Chipewyan hunter-fishers. In light of the ethnographic record indicating the effectiveness of a flat surface or a shallow pit as a fireplace, and the prevalence for fireplaces to be outside of shelters, one is inclined to think these internal, structured fireplaces might have had a ritual rather than routine purposes. The pit-houses might have been dedicated to social and ceremonial activities, possibly a type of sweat lodge (Waddington et al. Reference Waddington, Bailey, Bayliss and Milner2007; Mithen & Wicks Reference Mithen and Wicks2018).
Features that may have been large fire-pits might be interpreted as fires used for special rituals, analogous to those described by Marshall (see above, Reference Marshall1976) for the !Kung. The concentrations of burnt flint in the centre of pits at Farnham were interpreted as hearths within dwelling structures (Clark & Rankine Reference Clark and Rankine1937–8). This site deserves revisiting because the absence of features such as post-holes and the high frequency of burnt flints throughout the deposits questions this interpretation. The Farnham pits appear similar to that at Staosnaig (Mithen et al. Reference Mithen, Finlay, Carruthers, Carter and Ashmore2001; compare Clark & Rankine Reference Clark and Rankine1937–8, pl. viii with Fig. 8 below), suggesting an alternative interpretation of their use as large fire-pits rather than as dwellings.
Fireplaces often show evidence for repeated use
The fireplaces at Howick, Mount Sandel, and Criet Dubh show a pattern of repeated usage. One suspects this might be the case from elsewhere were further examples of fireplaces with multiple radiocarbon dates available. The repeated use of the same fireplace, or a discrete location for fireplaces, is also evident from the midden-related sites on Oronsay and at Morton. These have fireplaces built directly on top of previous ones, in some cases following the deposition of wind-blown sediment, and dense clusters of small hearths. Whereas Mithen and Wicks (2018) suggested that the recurrent occupation at Howick, Mount Sandel, and Criet Dubh was for the re-use of the structures, a more likely scenario is the re-use of the fireplace – sitting and telling stories where recent relatives and distant ancestors had sat and done the same. The structures themselves would have likely deteriorated beyond use in the elapsed periods between occupations. As with the Selk’nam and the !Kung, the fireplace was likely to have been far more essential to a sense of place, social cohesion, and survival than temporary huts and windbreaks (Marshall Reference Marshall1976; Spikins et al. Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010).
The ubiquitous presence of on-site fire usage
Despite the challenging nature of this evidence, its key significance is simply the ubiquitous presence of fire – whether represented by fireplaces or by dispersed burnt material – on Mesolithic sites. Interpretations of specific fireplaces from the archaeological record will always be problematic because hunter-gatherers are prone to leave behind ‘such a variable number of piles of ash from fires that had such a variety of purposes’ (Marshall Reference Marshall1976, 91, writing about !Kung encampments). Nevertheless, recognising that fireplaces were not only used for cooking and practical activities, but also as loci for story-telling, singing, and ritual, activities that enculturated the surrounding landscape, provides us with a more holistic view of Mesolithic life – even if the specific activities and meanings attached to the landscape remain unknown. Further insights might arise by considering the fireplaces within the topography of the landscape and in the context of known subsistence activities and settlement patterns.
A Case Study From Western Scotland
My area of particular interest is the southern Inner Hebrides, with its principal islands of Islay, Jura, Colonsay, Oronsay, Mull, Coll, and Tiree, and the seaways between these islands and the mainland (Fig. 6).
Numerous Mesolithic sites are known within this region. Proposing how this land- and seascape might have been enculturated, and what specific features might have been attributed with meaning, inevitably involves conjecture because, as noted above, the social history and cosmology of the Mesolithic is entirely lost to us. Nevertheless, unless one makes such proposals, any account of the Mesolithic will remain partial and we will fail to challenge our own interpretations of the evidence – that is the Mesolithic archaeologist’s dilemma, which becomes acutely evident within this study region. A pre-requisite is to embed such proposals in a thorough knowledge of the archaeological evidence: having undertaken survey and excavation within the region over a 30 year period, I trust I might have leeway to step beyond what can be securely inferred from the archaeological data alone.
Current and historic meanings on the landscape
As is often the case, the present-day and recent history can provide a guide to the more distant past. The present-day land/seascapes of western Scotland are subject to many layers of meaning, these varying between different interest groups such as farmers, estate owners, whisky distillers, tourists, wildlife experts, seafarers, archaeologists, and so forth. My experience of working in this region is that every patch of land and sea has stories about it, often told differently by different people.
Place-names are principally in Gaelic and indicate a further layer of meanings, many of which are now lost. While the names and associated stories themselves are unlikely to be relevant to the Mesolithic, that being so distant in time, they nevertheless indicate topographic locations that are prone to being attributed with social and symbolic significance. On Islay, for instance, the prominent peak on the western Rhinns peninsula is Benin Tart a ‘Mhill (232 m), translated sometimes as ‘mountain of drought’ (Ferguson & Perrons Reference Ferguson and Perrons1988) and sometimes as ‘stag hill’ (Caldwell Reference Caldwell2008, 139). This peak illustrates on-going enculturation with the burial of a young man (Rod Dawson) on its summit in 1977 followed, in the 1980s, by the positioning of a communication mast for civil aircraft. Some place-names appear descriptive of the natural world: Ard Imersay is the ‘promontory of the emmer goose’, and Ballaiblaven the ‘Township of the buzzard’. Other place-names allude to historical events. Carnduncan, for instance, is the burial place of Duncan, the foster-son of Sir Lachland Mor MacLean, the 14th Chief of Duart. As recounted in the story of the 1598 Battle of Traigh Ghruineard, Duncan was killed by his own mother after he had laughed at the bobbing head of MacLean’s corpse when being taken from the battlefield for burial. She killed and buried Duncan below a heap of stones that became ‘Cairn of Duncan’. In ‘reality’, Carnduncan is a Bronze Age cairn (RCAHMS 1985, 52). The stories associated with other place-names are entirely lost: Loch Conilbhe means ‘Loch of the Goddess’ and Loch Drolsay means ‘Loch of the Trolls’. Other names hint at past social occasions: Aoradh means ‘place of sun worship’ and Sunderland probably means ‘assembly place by the loch’ (Ferguson & Perrons Reference Ferguson and Perrons1988).
The most striking peaks in the whole region are the Paps of Jura – three conical peaks 700–800 m in height. These not only dominate their immediate surroundings but also form part of the seascape for many miles around, being prominent landmarks from Kintyre, the islands of Colonsay, Mull, Tiree, and Coll, and even from the tower blocks of Glasgow (Youngson Reference Youngson2001). The origins of and stories associated with their Gaelic names are unknown: Beinn an Or (785 m), the ‘Peak of Gold’, Beinn Shiantaidh (755 m), the ‘Peak of Storms’, and ‘Beinn a’Chaolais (734 m), the ‘Peak of Narrows or Sound’. The highest peak of the region is Beinn Mhòr (966 m) on the Isle of Mull, meaning ‘Great Mountain’. Another prominent feature of the region is the Gulf of Corryvreckan, meaning ‘cauldron of the speckled seas’ or ‘cauldron of the plaid’, about which there are many stories (Youngson Reference Youngson2001, 172–5). Located in the narrow strait between the islands of Jura and Scarba, Corryvreckan has energetic whirlpools and tidal currents. In one account, the goddess of winter, Cailleach Bheur, uses the gulf to wash her great plaid, which ushers in the turn of the seasons from autumn to winter. As winter approaches, her cloth is washed pure white and becomes the blanket of snow that covers the land.
The Mesolithic economy and landscape enculturation
The Mesolithic economy involved hunting terrestrial and sea mammals, including red deer, wild boar, otters, and seal, as evident from the faunal remains from Oronsay middens, Storakaig, and the Rubha Port an t-Seilich (Mellars 1987; Wicks et al. Reference Wicks, Pirie and Mithen2014; Mithen et al. Reference Mithen, Wicks, Pirie, Riede, Lane, Banjerea, Cullen, Gittins and Pankhurst2015). The coastal location of numerous sites and evidence from Oronsay and Fiskary indicate in-shore fishing and collection of coastal resources, including shellfish and crabs (Mellars 1987; Wicks & Mithen Reference Wicks, Mithen, Persson, Reide, Skar, Breivik and Johnson2017). Charred hazelnuts are ubiquitous at Mesolithic sites and found in especially large numbers at Staosnaig, along with crab apple and lesser celandine (Mithen et al. 2001). There is compelling evidence from Islay and Mull for the use of fire for vegetation clearance and, potentially, other forms of landscape management (Edwards Reference Edwards and Mithen2000; McCullagh Reference McCullagh1989; Edwards et al.Reference Edwards, Langdon and Sugden2007)
The fireplaces found at several of these Mesolithic sites (Table 1), and inferred at others by the presence of burnt material, would have been essential for preparing food and other practical tasks. Their number and character suggest they had also played a role in social activities. One of these is likely to have been communicating whereabouts, because night-time fires would have been seen from long distances, certainly from one island to another as is the case with electric lights today. Night-time fires would have also played a role in the enculturation of the landscapes.
The enculturation of the Hebridean land-/seascape is likely to have begun in the Late Pleistocene (c. 12,000 cal bp) in light of a tanged point and Ahrensburgian-like technology from Rubha Port an t-Seilich on the east coast of Islay (Mithen et al. Reference Mithen, Wicks, Pirie, Riede, Lane, Banjerea, Cullen, Gittins and Pankhurst2015; Berg-Hansen et al. Reference Berg-Hansen, Wicks and Mithen2019). Such exploration likely originated from the northern margins of Doggerland and followed around the north and west coast of Scotland in light of the distribution of tanged points on Orkney, Shieldig, Tiree, and Islay. The first radiocarbon dated activity is at c. 10,230 cal bp at Criet Dubh, Isle of Mull (Mithen & Wicks Reference Mithen and Wicks2018). Landscape enculturation during such exploration and pioneering settlement may have followed similar stages to those of the Kesyehot’ine Chipewyan when moving from the sub-Arctic into boreal forest, as described above. It is reasonable to assume that prominent landmarks and seamarks such as the Paps of Jura and the Gulf of Corryvreckan were named during this period.
Land-/seascape enculturation would have continued as the intensity of Mesolithic activity increased to a maximum at c. 8200 cal bp, as measured by a peak in the summed calibrated probability distribution of radiocarbon dates (Wicks & Mithen Reference Wicks and Mithen2014). The abrupt climatic event at that date appears to have caused population collapse in light of the dramatic reduction in activity. This suggests the Mesolithic population had always been relatively low and sensitive to environmental change, as further indicated by the tempo of activity at Criet Dubh (Mithen & Wicks Reference Mithen and Wicks2018). To use Lovis’s (2016) term, the region is likely to have been a ‘big rough space with few people’. As such, landscape enculturation would have been a priority for maintaining social networks. Mesolithic activity gradually increased again after c. 8000 cal bp, before coming to an abrupt end by the arrival of the Neolithic at c. 5600 cal bp (Wicks & Mithen Reference Wicks and Mithen2014).
Fireplaces and their interpretation
Rubha Port an t-Seilich has one of the most substantial fireplaces from the British Mesolithic (Fig. 7). Constructed within the shelter of two outcrop boulders of rock, its earliest deposits correspond with the horizon of the Ahrensburgian-like artefacts. The fireplace consists of burnt stone, charcoal, charred hazelnut shell, and burnt artefacts that accumulated throughout a long succession of site visits, the last of which is currently centred on c. 7880 cal bp (Mithen et al. Reference Mithen, Wicks, Pirie, Riede, Lane, Banjerea, Cullen, Gittins and Pankhurst2015; Mithen et al. in press). Stone slabs were placed around the fireplace, between which discrete clusters of flint tools and debitage were found, along with coarse stone tools, fragments of calcined animal bone (primarily from red deer), charcoal, and charred hazelnut shell. Sergant et al. (Reference Sergant, Crombe and Perdaen2006) note that temperatures of 700°C are required to calcinate bone whereas cooking requires 250°C at a maximum. As such, the bone fragments at Rubha Port an t-Seilich seem unlikely to be the product of accidental burning during cooking. The use of bone as fuel also seems equally unlikely in light of the availability of wood, evident from the charcoal present, dominated by birch and hazel. One is drawn, therefore, to make comparisons with the use of fire to make ritual transformation of hunted animals into products suitable for consumption, as undertaken by the Siberian Iukagir hunters when they use fire to convert an animal from the social to the natural world (Willersley 2010).
The ecological attraction of Rubha Port an t-Seilich is reasonably intuitive: rocky outcrops into the strait separating Islay from Jura provide landing places for small boats travelling either south or north. The straits themselves provide a routeway connecting Kintyre with the islands of Mull, Colonsay, Oronsay, Coll, and Tiree – it seems no coincidence that Rubha Port an t-Seilich is located just a kilometre from the modern ferry terminal of Port Askaig. The location provides access to marine and coastal resources, and terrestrial woodland for hunting and gathering on both Islay and, immediately across the narrow straits, the Isle of Jura. With regard to Rubha Port an t-Seilich as a location for story-telling and other types of enculturation activities, one must note that it faces north-east, across the straits to Jura and its three Paps (Fig. 8). We cannot know whether these were spiritually charged in the Mesolithic but it would be obtuse to think otherwise.
Another impressive fireplace is located at the site of Criet Dubh on the Isle of Mull (Mithen & Wicks Reference Mithen and Wicks2018; Fig. 4). This contained unshaped blocks of burned stone within shallow pits, covered in heavily burned deposits. Stakes and posts had surrounded the fireplace, but their truncation by recent cultivation leave the type of structure they represent unclear – windbreaks, a hut, a smoke house, or even a mini-sweat lodge? Radiocarbon dating of the deposits that had accumulated around, over, and in-between the hearthstones and from the immediately adjacent features indicate that Criet Dubh had been visited and the fireplace used on multiple occasions between c. 10,230 cal bp and 8580 cal bp. A structure, probably less substantial than the later hut, had been built early in this sequence of visits, perhaps providing the type of artificial marking of the landscape undertaken by the Kesyehot’ine Chipewayan as an integral part of their enculturation of a newly colonised landscape. An attractive ethnographic analogy for the later hut is that provided by the Selk’nam for the male initiation ceremony. This involved a ‘Hain’ hut constructed away from the settlement exclusively for men. It contained a central fireplace from which spirits would rise from the spirit world into the hut (Spikins et al. Reference Spikins, Kelly and Manzi2010).
As at Rubha Port an t-Seilich, the ecological attraction of Criet Dubh is intuitive: the site is adjacent to an estuary that would have provided outstanding opportunities for fishing, fowling, and foraging, and at the shortest crossing point to the Isle of Coll. Another similarity with Rubha Port an t-Seilich is that the vista from Criet Dubh is towards some of the most notable peaks in the region – the distinctive and dramatic mountains of the Islands of Rum and Skye (Fig. 8).
Staosnaig, Isle of Colonsay, provides another impressive fireplace, albeit one that has remained unrecognised as such (Fig. 9). A 4.5 m diameter circular shallow pit contained more than 15 kg of charred hazelnut shell fragments, estimated to have come from 30–40,000 hazelnuts (Mithen et al. 2001), arising from at least six visits to the site between c. 9060 cal bp and 6230 cal bp. The smaller surrounding features may have been ovens for roasting hazelnuts and other plant foods, potentially reused as fireplaces. Experimental roasting charrs 12–25% of hazelnuts, which destroys the kernel (Score & Mithen Reference Score and Mithen2000). Had it just been such charred waste discarded into the large pit, then at least 300,000 hazelnuts would have been roasted at Staosnaig. It seems more likely that people had deliberately gathered the shells from all the roasted hazelnuts – charred or otherwise – for deposition and burning in the pit. Why do this? Why not simply leave them on the ground to be washed or trampled away? The answer may have been to create a mass of glowing embers and a cloud of aromatic wood smoke at a fireplace that also provides a south-easterly view towards the Paps of Jura. One cannot resist thinking about the use of wood-smoke by the Chukchis reindeer herders, to keep the male reindeer strong and virile during the rutting season (Vaté Reference Vaté2010). Equally, the large central fire-pit with smaller adjacent fireplaces invokes Marshall’s (Reference Marshall1976, 91) description of special fires for ritual activities amongst the !Kung around which dancing takes place, during which those who are not dancing sit at small fires near the dance circle.
There are further significant fireplaces within this study region (Table 1). Those at the Oronsay middens and the extensive burnt deposits at Storakaig (Isle of Islay), with heavily calcined bone, have been noted above. A large pit not dissimilar to that at Staosnaig was excavated at Newton (Isle of Islay) and a structure consisting of three stone rings at Lussa Wood on Jura is likely to have been a fireplace (Mercer Reference Mercer1978).
Mobility and subsistence in an encultured landscape
We are unable to infer the specific meanings, cosmological and otherwise, that Mesolithic people attached to their land-/seascapes. It would be surprising if those prominent features conferred with meanings in historic times had not been considered likewise in the Mesolithic. The sea-travelling explorers and pioneers would surely have encountered the whirlpool now known as the Gulf of Coryvrecken and given it a name. The vistas from Rubha Port an t-Seilich, Criet Dubh, and Staosnaig have already been noted. More generally, Mesolithic sites were positioned to have a more wide-ranging view across the landscape than would have occurred by chance (Lake et al. 1998). While of value for watching for game, and observing the natural world in general, this might also reflect the cosmological and social meanings of the landscape.
There is a huge accumulation of Mesolithic stone artefacts on the lower slopes of Benin Tart a ‘Mhill at the site of Bolsay (Mithen et al. Reference Mithen2000a). This is a palimpsest from multiple visits to what was most likely a red deer hunting camp, with concentrations of burnt flint indicating many small fireplaces. It is difficult to resist analogies with the attraction of the Blackfoot Indians to the Sweetgrass Hills (now in Montana). This was also a prominent landmark, to which they regularly returned for hunting, in their case of buffalo. The Sweetgrass Hills were also integral to Blackfoot cosmology and their camping sites not only met subsistence needs but also provided a location for spiritual activities in preparation for religious ceremonies. The same might have been the case for the Mesolithic hunters who visited Bolsay. We should note the continued use of Bolsay into the Neolithic with the loss/deposition of a polished stone axe and the construction of a Neolithic chambered cairn in its close vicinity (the ‘Giant’s Grave’, RCAHMS 1985, 50), as well as the only stone circle on the island (Cultoon, RCAHMS 1985, 66–7). Both Tilley (1994) and Bradley (Reference Bradley2000) have cited the deposition of artefacts and construction of later monuments as possible indicators of the sacredness of a natural place in the Mesolithic.
It is tempting to think that the Gaelic place-names might reflect inherent properties of place and possibly the long-term continuation of activities. The hunting camp at Bolsay seems appropriately positioned at the base of a hill known as ‘Stag Hill’, while Rubha Port an t-Seilich has been translated as ‘point of the hunter’. A Mesolithic site, interpreted as an observatory for wildfowl and game, is known at Aoradh (Mithen et al. Reference Mithen, Woodman, Finlay and Finlayson2000b): the ‘place of sun worship’.
More generally, the notion that the journeys across and between the islands and mainland of this study area were fulfilling historical, social, and cosmological imperatives as well meeting subsistence and other needs is compelling. While visits to Coulererach on the west coast of Islay might have served to acquire flint pebbles (Mithen & Finlay Reference Mithen and Finlay2000), this coastline has a dramatic topography and was charged with value from at least the Neolithic onwards in light of monuments such as the Balinaby standing stone and a later Viking burial (RCAHMS 1985).
The meeting of social and/or cosmological obligations may have provided the motivation for the repeated visits to small islands such as Oronsay, Colonsay, Oronsay, and Coll that would have required treacherous and lengthy sea crossings. While resources on such islands may have been of value, it seems unlikely that the benefits gained would have offset the costs and risks of sea-travel when the same types of resources were also available on the larger islands and mainland. The sets of radiocarbon dates from these the small-island sites suggest such visits had been infrequent. At Fiskary on the Isle of Coll, for instance, the available radiocarbon dates (n=6) suggest three visits (or short sequences of visits) centred on 9070 cal bp, 8520 cal bp, and 8280 cal bp, which are several generations apart (Wicks & Mithen 2017). From an ecological perspective, this may have fulfilled the need for updating environmental knowledge as it fades from shared memory or in light of climate change. The motivation for such sea crossings, however, might have been to meet social and cosmological obligations implanted by the stories, singing and ritual performed at night around the fireplaces of Rubha Port an t-Seilich, Criet Dubh, and Storakaig. One can but wonder whether the much later prevalence of small isolated islands to be used as locations for spiritual devotion has its roots in the Mesolithic.
Summary
We need to develop a holistic perspective on the past lives of Mesolithic hunter-gatherers. The weight of evidence from the ethnographic record suggests that early Holocene landscapes would have been enculturated with multiple levels and types of meanings. Although the content of those meanings are forever lost to us, we must nevertheless consider what role such meanings and the process of enculturation played in Mesolithic lifeways, and how these influenced the character of the archaeological record. This is the Mesolithic archaeologist’s dilemma: in light of the universal presence but extraordinary diversity of meanings attached to landscapes by ethnographically documented hunter-gatherers, the risk of ignoring the existence of such meanings in the Mesolithic is as great as the risk of proposing either their content or the process by which they the landscape was enculturated. Willing to take the latter of those risks, my argument has been that we find evidence for the creation, reproduction, and revision of meanings attached to early Holocene landscapes in the most ubiquitous of evidence: the fireplaces of the Mesolithic and the burnt artefacts, bones, and charred plant material that are pervasive on Mesolithic sites.
Acknowledgements:
I am grateful to Elaine Jamieson for the preparation of Figs 1 and 5, and support in the development of this manuscript, and to Mike Donnelly, Clive Waddington, and Penny Spikins for providing Figs 2, 3, & 5. Martin Bell kind providing comments and advice regarding an earlier version of this manuscript.