- Bytham River
The Bytham River is a now lost ancient
river inpaleolithic Britain that ran through the EnglishMidlands until around 450,000 years ago. Its course has been suggested as the route that the first humans to visit Britain took.The river rose in the vicinity of modern-day
Stratford-on-Avon and ran through the Midlands for millennia during the first half of thePleistocene period. It ran north east towards modern dayLeicester then east intoEast Anglia . At this point it turned south toBury St Edmunds before turning east again towardsLowestoft and emptying into the southernNorth Sea .Much of the river valley was scoured away by the
Anglian Stage , but parts were covered and preserved by glacial soil deposits which has enabledgeologist s andarchaeologist s to reconstruct its course. It was discovered by a geographer, Professor Jim Rose of theUniversity of London in the 1980s and named after theLincolnshire village ofCastle Bytham where Rose first identified it.Its wide sand and gravel banks would have provided an easy route to travel along and the river would have provided water, vegetation and attracted animals making it a useful place for humans to exploit. A concentration of Lower
Palaeolithic occupation sites dating to before the Anglian glaciation is known along the river's route includingWaverley Wood nearCoventry andHigh Lodge ,West Dereham ,Feltwell , Brandon,Hengrave ,Lakenheath andWarren Hill in East Anglia. This indicates that the river was significant to the first inhabitants of Britain who lived between 700,000 and 500,000 years ago. It would have been the largest river in Britain at the time although the second largest river, which was to become theRiver Thames , shows no similar indication of pre-Anglian human occupation.External links
* [http://www.arch-ant.bham.ac.uk/shottonproject/ice2.htm A map of the river's course]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4526264.stm BBC:Tools unlock secrets of early man]
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