Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T21:38:29.010Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Reinterpretation of the Microlithic Industries of Wales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

G. J. Wainwright
Affiliation:
Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments, Ministry of Public Building and Works

Extract

The distribution of Mesolithic sites in Wales is controlled to a great extent by the terrain, for physiographically, Wales is a highland block defined on three sides by the sea and for the greater part of the fourth side by a sharp break of slope. Geologically the Principality is composed almost entirely of Palaeozoic rocks, of which the 600-foot contour encloses more than three quarters of the total area. There are extensive regions above 1,500 feet and 2,000 feet and in the north the peaks of Snowdonia and Cader Idris rise to 3,560 feet and 2,929 feet respectively. Indeed North Wales consists of an inhospitable highland massif, skirted by a lowland plateau and cut deeply by river valleys, providing only limited areas for settlement. The hills and mountains of Snowdonia with their extension at lower altitudes into the Lleyn Peninsula, and the ranges of Moelwyn, Manod Mawr, Arenig Fach and Cader Idris, are discouraging obstacles to penetration, save for a short distance along the river valleys. To the east of these peaks are extensive tracts of upland plateau dissected by rivers, bounded on the west by the vale of the river Conway and cleft by the Vale of Clwyd. To the east of this valley lies the Clwydian Range and further again to the east these uplands descend with milder contours to the Cheshire and Shropshire plains.

To the south the district merges into the uplands of Central Wales, which are continuous until they are replaced by the lowland belt of South Wales.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1963

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

Allen, E. E., 1938. ‘A Stone Age Flint Chipping Site in the Vale of Towy, Llanegwad Parish,’ Carmarthenshire Ant. Soc. Field Club, vol. 28, pp. 92–4.Google Scholar
Boyd Dawkins, W., 1901. ‘The Cairn and Sepulchral Cave at Gop, near Prestatyn’, Arch. J., vol. 58, pp. 332–42.Google Scholar
Boyd Dawkins, W., 1902. ‘On the Cairn and Sepulchral Cave at Gop, near Prestatyn’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 57, pp. 161–81.Google Scholar
Cantrill, T. C., 1915. ‘Flint Chipping Floors in South-west Pembrokeshire’, Arch Cambrensis, vol. 70, pp. 157210.Google Scholar
Cantrill, T. C., 1919. ‘Note on a Collection of Flints from Dale, Pembrokeshire’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 74, pp. 193–7.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1938. ‘Microlithic Industries from Tufa Deposits at Prestatyn, Flintshire and Blashenwell, Dorset’, PPS, vol. 4 (N.S.), pp. 330–2.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1939. ‘A Further Note on the Tufa Deposit at Prestatyn, Flintshire’, PPS, vol. 5 (N.S.), pt. 1, pp. 201–2.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1954. Excavations at Star Carr. An Early Mesolithic Site at Seamer near Scarborough, Yorkshire (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1955. ‘A Microlithic Industry from the Cambridgeshire Fenland and other Industries of Sauveterrian Affinities from Britain’, PPS, vol. 21 (N.S.), pp. 321.Google Scholar
Coulonges, L., 1935, Les Gisements Préhistoriques de Sauveterre-la-Lèmance (Lot-et-Garonne), Arch. Inst. Palaeont. Hum. (Paris), Mém. 14.Google Scholar
Coulonges, L., 1954. ‘Le Sauveterrien’, Bull. Soc. préhist. franç., vol. 51, no. 8, pp. 70–1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daniel, J. E., 1927. ‘Excavations in the Kerry Hills, Montgomeryshire’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 82, pp. 147–9.Google Scholar
George, T. N., 1930. ‘The Submerged Forest in Gower’, Proc. Swansea Scient. Field Nat. Soc., vol. 1, pp. 100–9.Google Scholar
George, T. N., 1935. ‘A Mesolithic Site in Gower’, Proc. Swansea Scient. Field Nat. Soc., vol. 1, pt. 9, pp. 289–94.Google Scholar
George, T. N., 1936. ‘The Geology of the Swansea Main Drainage Excavations’, Proc. Swansea Scient. Field Nat. Soc., vol. 1, pp. 331–60.Google Scholar
George, T. N., 1938. ‘Shoreline Evolution in the Swansea District’, Proc. Swamea Scient. Field Nat. Soc., vol. 2, pp. 2348.Google Scholar
George, T. N. and Griffiths, J. C., 1938. ‘The Superficial Deposits at the Mouth of the River Tawe’, Proc. Swansea Scient. Field Nat. Soc., vol. 2, pp. 6371.Google Scholar
Glenn, T. A., 1926. ‘Recent Finds near Rhyl’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 81, pp. 199203.Google Scholar
Glenn, T. A., 1935. ‘The Distribution of the Graig Lwyd Axe and its Associated Cultures’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 90, pp. 189218.Google Scholar
Godwin, H., 1940. ‘A Boreal Transgression of the Sea in Swansea Bay. Data for the Study of Post-Glacial History. VI’, New Phytologist, vol. 39, no. 3, pp. 308–21.Google Scholar
Godwin, H., 1956. The History of the British Flora (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Gordon-Williams, J. P., 1926. ‘The Nab Head Chipping Floor’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 81, pp. 86111.Google Scholar
Grimes, W. F., 1932. ‘Surface Flint Industries around Solva, Pembrokeshire’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 87, pp. 179–92.Google Scholar
Grimes, W. F., 1935. ‘Recent Finds of Prehistoric Implements’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 8, pp. 95–6.Google Scholar
Grimes, W. F., 1951. The Prehistory of Wales (Cardiff).Google Scholar
Hicks, H., 1885. ‘On some Recent Researches on Bone Caves in Wales’, Proc Geol. Assoc., vol. 9, pp. 120.Google Scholar
Hyde, H. A., 1936. ‘On a Peat Bed at the East Moors, Cardiff’, Trans. Cardiff Nat. Soc., vol. 69, pp. 3948.Google Scholar
Jerman, H. N., 1933. ‘Recent Finds on the Kerry Hills, Montgomeryshire’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 6, pp. 381–2.Google Scholar
Lacaille, A. D. and Grimes, W. F., 1955. ‘The Prehistory of Caldey’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 104, pp. 85166.Google Scholar
Leach, A. L., 1913. ‘Stone Implements from Soil Drifts and Chipping Floors etc., in South Pembroke’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 68, pp. 391432.Google Scholar
Leach, A. L., 1918. ‘Flint Working Sites on the Submerged Land (Submerged Forest) bordering the Pembrokeshire Coast’, Proc. Geol. Assoc., vol. 29, pt. 2, pp. 4664.Google Scholar
Leach, A. L., 1933. ‘Stone Implements from the Nab Head, St. Brides, Pembrokeshire’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 88, pp. 229–36.Google Scholar
Maltby, C. A., Oakley, K. P. and Howarth, W. E., 1938. ‘Pared Llechymenin, Aberdaron, Caernarvonshire’, PPS, vol. 4 (N.S.) pt. 2, p. 324.Google Scholar
Moggeridge, M., 1856. ‘On the Section Exposed in the Excavation of the Swansea Docks’, Quart. J. Geol. Soc., vol. 12.Google Scholar
Morris, J. H., 1923. ‘Finds of Neolithic and Bronze Age Antiquity from under the Submerged Forest Bed at Rhyl’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 78, pp. 151–3.Google Scholar
Neaverson, E., 1935. ‘Recent Observations on the Post-Glacial Peat Beds around Rhyl and Prestatyn (Flintshire)’, Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc., vol. 17, pp. 4563.Google Scholar
North, F. J., 1955. The Evolution of the Bristol Channel (Cardiff).Google Scholar
Pape, T., 1927 A. ‘A Prehistoric Settlement in Anglesey’, Anglesey Ant. Soc., pp. 2334.Google Scholar
Pape, T., 1927 B. ‘Prehistoric Settlement in Anglesey’, Ant. J., vol. 7, pp. 196–7.Google Scholar
Pape, T., 1928. ‘Prehistoric Discoveries in Newborough Warren’, Anglesey Ant. Soc., pp. 21–9.Google Scholar
Pape, T., 1929. ‘Newborough Warren Flints in 1928’, Anglesey Ant. Soc., pp. 95–6.Google Scholar
Peate, I. C., 1929. ‘Current Work in Welsh Archaeology’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 5, p. 82.Google Scholar
Peate, I. C., 1931. ‘Bronze Age Barrow near Kerry, Montgomeryshire’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 6, p. 90.Google Scholar
Ridgeway, M. H. and Leach, G. B., 1946. ‘Prehistoric Flint Workshop Site near Abersoch, Caernarvonshire’, Arch Cambrensis, vol. 99, pp. 7884.Google Scholar
Savory, H. N., 1948. ‘Archaeology in Wales, 1946–1948’, Archaeol. News Letter, vol. 1, no. 10, pp. 89.Google Scholar
Savory, H. N., 1954. ‘Current Work in Welsh Archaeology’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 16, p. 49.Google Scholar
Smith, G., 1926. ‘Prehistoric Remains at Bryn Newydd, Prestatyn’, Proc. Llandudno and District Field Club, vol. 13, pp. 6272.Google Scholar
Strathan, A., 1896. ‘On Submerged Land Surfaces at Barry, Glamorgan’ (with notes on the Fauna and Flora by Clement Reid), Quart. J. Geol. Soc., vol. 52.Google Scholar
Thomas, R., 1912. ‘A Prehistoric Flint Factory Discovered at Aberystwyth’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 67, pp. 211–17.Google Scholar
Thomas, R., 1923. ‘Pigmy Flints found at Newport, Pembrokeshire’, Arch. Cambrensis, vol. 78 pp. 324–6.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. and Dudlyke, E. R., 1925. ‘A Flint Chipping Floor at Aberystwyth’, JRI, vol. 55, pp. 7390.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1959. ‘The Excavation of a Mesolithic Site at Freshwater West, Pembrokeshire’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 18, pt. 2, pp. 196205.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1960 A. ‘The Re-examination of a Chipping Floor at Frainslake, Pembrokeshire, and its Affiliated Sites’, Bull. Board Celtic Studies, vol. 19, pt. 1.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1960 B. ‘Three Microlithic Industries from South-west England and their Affinities’, PPS, vol. 26 (N.S.), pp. 193201.Google Scholar