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Digging up Britain : ten discoveries, a million years of history / Mike Pitts.

By: Publisher: London ; New York, New York : Thames & Hudson, 2019Copyright date: ©2019Description: 288 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Audience:
  • Historians
ISBN:
  • 9780500051900
Other title:
  • Ten discoveries, a million years of history
  • 10 discoveries, a million years of history
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • CC165 .P58 2019
Contents:
A Viking massacre, Weymouth, AD 1000 -- The Staffordshire hoard, Hammerwich, AD 600-700 -- Roman occupation, London, AD 45-400 -- Living in round houses, Black Loch, 450-250 BC, and Must Farm, 1300-800 BC -- Paths of the dead, Cliff's End, 900-300 BC -- Shaped by beliefs, Stonehenge, 4000-2000 BC -- Deer hunters, Star Carr, 11,000 years ago -- Cannibals, Gough's Cave, 15,000 years ago -- Elephant hunters, Barnham, 400,000 years ago -- Journeys, a million years of history.
Summary: Britain has long been obsessed with its own history and identity, as an island nation besieged by invaders from beyond the seas: the Romans, Vikings and Normans. The long saga of prehistory is often forgotten. But our understanding of our past is changing. In the last decade, astounding archaeological discoveries have shed new light on those who have gone before us, radically altering the way we think about our history. This book presents ten of the most exciting - and surprising - of these discoveries. Mike Pitts leads us on a journey through time from the more recent and familiar to the most remote and bizarre, just as archaeologists delving into the earth find themselves moving backwards through the years until they reach the very oldest remnants of the past. At each of these sites we hear from the people who found and recovered these ancient remains, and follow their efforts to understand them. Some are major digs, carried out to record sites before they are covered over by new developments. Others are chance finds, leading to revelations out of proportion to the scale of the original projects. All are extraordinary tales of luck and cutting-edge archaeological science that have produced profound, and often unexpected, insights into people's lives on these islands between a thousand and a million years ago.
Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book NMC Library Stacks CC165 .P58 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 33039001495299

Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-277) and index.

A Viking massacre, Weymouth, AD 1000 -- The Staffordshire hoard, Hammerwich, AD 600-700 -- Roman occupation, London, AD 45-400 -- Living in round houses, Black Loch, 450-250 BC, and Must Farm, 1300-800 BC -- Paths of the dead, Cliff's End, 900-300 BC -- Shaped by beliefs, Stonehenge, 4000-2000 BC -- Deer hunters, Star Carr, 11,000 years ago -- Cannibals, Gough's Cave, 15,000 years ago -- Elephant hunters, Barnham, 400,000 years ago -- Journeys, a million years of history.

Britain has long been obsessed with its own history and identity, as an island nation besieged by invaders from beyond the seas: the Romans, Vikings and Normans. The long saga of prehistory is often forgotten. But our understanding of our past is changing. In the last decade, astounding archaeological discoveries have shed new light on those who have gone before us, radically altering the way we think about our history. This book presents ten of the most exciting - and surprising - of these discoveries. Mike Pitts leads us on a journey through time from the more recent and familiar to the most remote and bizarre, just as archaeologists delving into the earth find themselves moving backwards through the years until they reach the very oldest remnants of the past. At each of these sites we hear from the people who found and recovered these ancient remains, and follow their efforts to understand them. Some are major digs, carried out to record sites before they are covered over by new developments. Others are chance finds, leading to revelations out of proportion to the scale of the original projects. All are extraordinary tales of luck and cutting-edge archaeological science that have produced profound, and often unexpected, insights into people's lives on these islands between a thousand and a million years ago.

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