Doggerland
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the growing understanding of the humans, plants and animals once living on land now under the North Sea, submerged in the Stone Age.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the people, plants and animals once living on land now under the North Sea, now called Doggerland after Dogger Bank, inhabited up to c7000BC or roughly 3000 years before the beginnings of Stonehenge. There are traces of this landscape at low tide, such as the tree stumps at Redcar (above); yet more is being learned from diving and seismic surveys which are building a picture of an ideal environment for humans to hunt and gather, with rivers and wooded hills. Rising seas submerged this land as glaciers melted, and the people and animals who lived there moved to higher ground, with the coasts of modern-day Britain on one side and Denmark, Germany, The Netherlands, Belgium and France on the other.
With
Vince Gaffney
Anniversary Professor of Landscape Archaeology at the University of Bradford
Carol Cotterill
Marine Geoscientist at the British Geological Survey
And
Rachel Bynoe
Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Southampton
Producer: Simon Tillotson
Last on
LINKS AND FURTHER READING
Vincent Gaffney at the University of Bradford
Carol Cotterill at the British Geological Survey
Rachel Bynoe at the University of Southampton
Europe’s Lost Frontiers project
Submerged Prehistoric Archaeology and Landscapes of the Continental Shelf (SPLASHCOS)
Pioneering populations – Natural History Museum
Building an offshore wind farm - Natural Environment Research Council
Hominin Footprints from Early Pleistocene Deposits at Happisburgh, UK - PLOS One, 2014
From the Field: Rachel Bynoe, Happisburgh – The Leakey Foundation
Of mammoths and other monsters: historic approaches to the submerged Palaeolithic - Antiquity, 2016
READING LIST:
Geoffrey Bailey, Jan Harff and Dimitris Sakellariou, (eds.), Under the Sea: Archaeology and Palaeolandscapes of the Continental Shelf (Springer International, 2017)
Jonathan Benjamin, Clive Bonsall, Catriona Pickard and Anders Fischer (eds.), Submerged Prehistory (Oxbow Books, 2011)
Nicholas C. Flemming, Jan Harff, Delminda Moura, Anthony Burgess and Geoffrey N. Bailey (eds.), Submerged Landscapes of the European Continental Shelf: Quaternary Paleoenvironments (Wiley Blackwell, 2017)
V. Gaffney, S. Fitch, and D. Smith, Europe’s Lost World: The Rediscovery of Doggerland (Council for British Archaeology, 2009)
V. Gaffney, K. Thomson and S. Fitch (eds), Mapping Doggerland: The Mesolithic Landscapes of the Southern North Sea (Archaeopress Archaeology, 2007)
C. Wickham-Jones, Landscape Beneath the Waves: The Archaeological Investigation of Underwater Landscapes (Oxbow Books, 2018)
Broadcasts
- Thu 27 Jun 201909:00BBC Radio 4
- Thu 27 Jun 201921:30BBC Radio 4
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