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Observations on the Provenance of the Thames Valley Pick, Swalecliffe, Kent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2013

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From the Marine Parade, Tankerton, Whitstable, looking East, one obtains a capital view of Tankerton Bay, Swalecliffe, in which my discoveries have been made which are to form the subject matter of this paper. The grassy cliff at Priest and Sow corner at the end of the road stands at 55 O.D. This height gradually declining round the arc of the bay, to die out entirely in the Long Rock occupying the middle distance and through which the Swalecliffe Brook discharges into the sea. Just beyond, a little to the right, are the disused Swalecliffe Brick Works, with Stud Hill and Hampton lying further back. To the left and edging the horizon, Herne Bay Pier is clearly discernable. The accompanying copy of (Plate I.) the 25-in. Ordnance map of this Tankerton Bay section gives the exact position of the 650 yards from the Parish Boundary Stone eastwards indicated thereon with a X in which are found the gravels and brick-earths which have proved so rich in archaeological treasure trove. The whole of this south-easterly directioned well-drained gently sloping ground, from the Priest and Sow corner to the Swalecliffe brook, forms an ideal camping site. Last April a paper was read by me before the Geological Association, at University College, London, entitled “An Examination of the Contents of the Brick Earths and Gravels of Tankerton Bay, Swalecliffe, Kent,” in which the geological aspect of this section was fairly exhaustively treated, so that in this particular it will be unnecessary for me to do more than give a brief summary of the results of that examination as to the relative age and stratigraphical sequence of the Drift material found here overlying the London Clay.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1926

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References

page 230 note * No. 6 on Plate VI. is a clean worked short broad celt with triangular section comparable to that illustrated in Miss Layard's article “Excavations on the Neolithic Site of Sainte Gertrude.” P.P.S. of E. A., Vol. V., Part I., page 47; whilst No. 7 on this same plate is the nose section of a “pick” and derived with No. 6 from foreshore 450 yards East of the Mark Stone.