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Westbury
Cave: the Natural History Museum excavations 1976-1984

editors
Peter
Andrews, Jill Cook, Andrew Currant and Christopher Stringer.
| |
ISBN
0-9535418-0-0 |
| publication
date |
1999
|
| description |
Hardback:309
pages, 173 figures, 52 tables |
| price |
£55
plus p&p |
| reference |
AR1 |
Archaeological
headlines were made world-wide in 1975 when an ancient
cave was exposed by quarrying above the village of Westbury-sub-Mendip,
Somerset, UK. Stone tools were found with bones of extinct
bears and other animals in the 500,000 year old deposits,
making it the oldest site with evidence of human activity
in Britain and one of the oldest in Europe. The Natural
History Museum excavations began in 1976, a multidisciplinary
project conducted by a well-known and respected team
from one of Britain's premier research institutions.
This is the full report on the excavation of an exceptional
mid-Pleistocene site.
The Westbury Cave excavations produced an unprecedented
sample of Middle Pleistocene fauna as well as more flints
and chert. Detailed taphonomic research underpins the
palaeoecological reconstructions, revealing an unexpectedly
complex sequence of climate changes with important implications
for the European Pleistocene record. A painstaking and
controversial analysis of the flints concludes they
are the product of natural processes, not human action,
but a single cut-marked bone betrays a human presence.
Early human occupation of Britain has since been confirmed
by the discoveries of Boxgrove, but Westbury remains
unique for its detailed palaeoecological record. The
analysis of the flints should provoke lively debate.
contributors include:
A
Gentry, B Ghaleb, P Goldberg, R Grün, R MacPhail,
D Schreve, W Stanton and A Turner.
For
further information and to order this publication visit
the publisher's website at:
http://www.waspress.co.uk/publications/


Paviland
Cave and the 'Red Lady': a definitive report

editor
Stephen
Aldhouse-Green
| foreword |
Rhodri
Morgan AM MP
First Secretary for
the National Assembly for Wales
|
| |
ISBN
0-9535418-1-9 |
| publication
date |
2000 |
| description |
Hardback:
314 pages (plus 16 colour plate section), 132 figures,
113 tables and 39 colour illustrations |
| price |
£40
plus p&p |
| reference |
AR3 |
The
richest Early Upper Palaeolithic site in Britain, Paviland
Cave on Wales Gower Peninsula, was discovered
in 1823 by Reverend William Buckland. He unearthed the
remains of a young adult male, covered with red ochre,
but the body soon became the subject of debate, not
least because of its early mis-identification as the
Red Lady of Paviland. Ceremonially buried,
with ivory ornaments and perforated seashells, the circumstances
hint at a ritual or shamanic use of the site.
The recent re-excavation of the site, a new study of
previously excavated artefacts, and a suite of radiocarbon
dates, have enabled reconstruction of the phases and
nature of human use of the cave. Set in the context
of climatic and environmental change, this has allowed
new, intriguing interpretations to be made of Paviland.
The dating evidence suggests that the Aurignacian appeared
relatively late in Britain, towards 28,000 BP, and that
Britain was only infrequently visited by task groups
or - more controversially - pilgrims during the climatic
downturn from 27,000 BP until the onset of the Last
Glacial Maximum.
contributors include:
A
Brookes, DQ Bowen, P Bull, D Case, N Debenham, A Eastham,
T Holliday, M Ivanovich, R Jones, A Latham, DJ Lowe,
R Mourne, PB Pettitt, M Richards, S Swainston, BC Sykes,
E Trinkaus, A Turner, EA Walker and T Young.
For
further information and to order this publication visit
the publisher's website at:
http://www.waspress.co.uk/publications/


The Year
of the Ghost: an Olduvai diary

author
Derek
Roe
| publication
date |
November
2002 |
| |
ISBN
0-9535418-5-1 |
| description |
Hardback:
prelims viii, 186 pages, 15 colour illustrations,
19 black and white illustrations |
| UK
price |
£14.95 |
| Outside
UK price |
£16.95
including p&p
|
In
January 1983 Oxford archaeologist Derek Roe packed his
pen and set off for Tanzania. He was going to Olduvai
Gorge to act as ghost-writer for the autobiography of
Mary Leakey, "grande dame" of African archaeology.
His credentials were excellent: as a specialist in Early
Stone Age hand-axes he had worked with Mary and her
husband Louis; his writing was clear and elegant; and,
perhaps most important of all, Mary thought she could
get on with him. In this beautifully crafted diary Derek
tells the story of the three visits he made that year.
He gives us many glimpses of local colour, but also
of the woman usually obscured by the double defence
of archaeology and Dalmatians. The aftermath, bittersweet,
is summed up in an epilogue based around letters from
both parties. And, incidentally, this Oxford Professor
of Palaeolithic archaeology gives an excellent summary
of the archaeology of Olduvai Gorge, accessible to public
and professionals alike.
This
book can be ordered online by credit/debit card only.
If you are in the UK you may order it for £14.95,
postage and packing free. If you are anywhere else in
the world the price is £14.95 plus £2.00
for postage and packing (£16.95).
For
further information and to order this publication visit
Beagle Books on the publisher's website at:
http://www.waspress.co.uk/beagle/

©
Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd 2002
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