Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T18:02:06.931Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Lithic artefacts from test-pit excavations on Lundy: evidence for Mesolithic and Bronze Age occupation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2014

A. J. Schofield*
Affiliation:
English Heritage, Fortress House, 23 Savile Row, London, W1X 1AB

Abstract

Lundy is a small offshore island set in the approaches to the Bristol Channel. Prior to the late 1980s several excavations and artefact collections demonstrated the presence of prehistoric and historic communities on the island. Yet, despite this, little was understood of the intensity of occupation and the archaeological context within which the excavated sites occurred. Two surveys, one by the National Trust and one directed by the author, have been running concurently since 1988 with the aim of placing the well-documented sites or places in their spatial and behavioural context. This paper describes one element of the author's landscape survey project: the prehistoric occupation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1994

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

Balaam, N., Bell, M., Levitan, B., Macphail, R., Robinson, M. & Scaife, R. 1987. Prehistoric and Romano-British sites at Westwood Ho!. Devon: archaeological and palaeoenvironmental surveys 1983 and 1984. In Balaaam, N., Levitan, B. & Straker, V. (eds), Studies in Palaeoeconomy and Environment in South-West England, 163164. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 181.Google Scholar
Berridge, P. & Roberts, A. J. 1986. The Mesolithic period in Cornwall. Cornish Archaeology 25, 734.Google Scholar
Chanter, J. R. 1871. A History of Lundy Island.Google Scholar
Claris, P. D. & Thackray, D. W. R. 1990. Historic landscape survey of Lundy 1990: first interim report. Annual Report of the Lundy Field Society 41, 2633.Google Scholar
Gade, F. 1978. My Life on Lundy. Privately Published.Google Scholar
Gardner, K. 1957. Mesolithic Survey — North Devon. Trans-actions of the Devonshire Association 89, 160174.Google Scholar
Jacobi, R. 1979. Early Flandrian hunters in the south-west. In Maxfield, V. A. (ed.), Prehistoric Dartmoor in its context, 4893. Torquay. Devon Archaeological Society.Google Scholar
Loyd, L. R. W. 1925. Lundy: Its History and Natural History. Harlow: Longman.Google Scholar
Montague, L. A. D. 1931. Flint implements on Lundy. Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries 16, 257–259, 341.Google Scholar
Nance, J. D. & Ball, B. F. 1986. No surprises? The reliability and validity of test-pit sampling. American Antiquity 51, 457483.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schofield, A. J. 1988. Archaeological fieldwork 1988: the results of test-pit excavations and geophysical prospection south of Quarter Wall. Annual Report of the Lundy Field Society 39, 3145.Google Scholar
Schofield, A. J. 1991. The Langham Collection and associated finds: a large assemblage of chipped stone artefacts from Lundy. Annual Report of the Lundy Field Society 42, 7084.Google Scholar
Schofield, A. J. & Webster, C. J. 1989. Archaeological fieldwork 1989: further test-pit excavations south of Quarter Wall. Annual Report of the Lundy Field Society 40, 3447.Google Scholar
Schofield, A. J. & Webster, C. J. 1990. Archaeological 1990: further investigation of artefact concentrations south of Quarter Wall. Annual Report of the Lundy Field Society 41, 3452.Google Scholar
Thackray, C. 1989. The National Trust Archaeological Survey, Lundy Island, Devon. Privately circulated.Google Scholar