- Creswellian
The Creswellian is a British
Upper Palaeolithic culture named after the type site ofCreswell Crags inDerbyshire byDorothy Garrod in 1926. It dates to between c. 12,500 and 12,000 BP (uncalibrated) and was replaced by theMesolithic Maglemosian culture.It has parallels with the
Federmesser andHamburgian cultures of central Europe and theMagdelanian culture of southern Europe. The diagnostic tools are trapezoidal backed blades called Cheddar points and variant forms known as Creswell points as well as smallerbladelets . Other tool types include endscraper s made from long, straight blades. A special preparation technique was employed to remove blades from a core through striking in a single direction, leaving a distinct 'spur' on the striking platform. The tools were made using a softhammerstone or an antler hammer.Other finds from Creswellian contexts include Baltic
amber , mammoth ivory and animal teeth and bone. These were used to make harpoons, awls, beads and needles. Unusual bevelled ivory rods, known assagaie s have been found atGough's Cave inSomerset andKent's Cavern inDevon .Twenty eight sites producing Cheddar points are known in England and Wales though none have so far been found in
Scotland orIreland , regions which it is thought were not colonised by humans until later. Most sites are caves but there in increasing evidence for open air activity and that preferred sources of flint were exploited and that tools travelled distances of up to 100 miles from their sources. Some of the flint at Gough's Cave came from theVale of Pewsey inWiltshire whilst non-local seashells and amber from the North Sea coast also indicate a highly mobile population. This matches evidence from the Magdelanian cultures elsewhere in Europe and may suggest that exchange of goods and the sending out of specialised expeditions seeking raw materials may have been practised. Analysis ofdebitage at occupation sites suggests that flint nodules were reduced in size at source and the lighter blades carried by Creswellian groups as 'toolkits' in order to reduce the weight carried.Comparison of flint from Kent's Cavern and Creswell Crags has led some archaeologists to believe that they were made by the same group.
Food species eaten by Creswellian hunters focused on the wild horse ("
equus ferus ") or thered deer ("Cervus elaphus"), probably depending on the season, although thearctic hare ,reindeer ,mammoth ,Saiga antelope , wild cow, brown bear,lynx ,arctic fox and wolf were also exploited.
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