Here we go again! Another pre-publication TV docudrama, this time on the subject of the mammoths and other remains found in a gravel pit near Swindon. It's on Dec 30th, on BBC1, and it's called "Attenborough and the Mammoth Graveyard". There is, of course, vast pre-broadcast publicity, including a piece in yesterday's Observer:
Actually, I rather trust David Attenborough, who has a great knack of communicating scientific discoveries in an accessible and reliable way, without going off into flights of fancy. So, fingers crossed that the programme will be informative, entertaining and well grounded.
The dig at this gravel quarry site has been coordinated by DigVentures, which is a social enterprise company, rather than by one of the university departments of archaeological trusts. One of the leaders of the project is Lisa Westcott Wilkins. The discoveries in the pit were first investigated by two amateur fossil hunters, Sally and Neville Hollingworth. One of the lead investigators is Prof Ben Garrod from the Univ of East Anglia, who has written extensively on the woolly mammoth. A number of other university personnel have been brought in to help with specialist analyses.
https://digventures.com/projects/mammoth-graveyard/
Five mammoths, a steppe bison, a brown bear, and rumours of other animal remains as well -- and in addition flint tools including a Neanderthal hand axe. Some of the bones appear to have butchery marks on them -- so whether the animals were hunted, or just discovered, butchered and used for food, bones, skins and other body parts will no doubt be revealed. From one of the reports:
On top of the mammoths themselves - two adults, two juveniles and an infant that are thought to be 220,000 years old, they have also found giant elks, tiny creatures like dung beetles and snails and even seeds, pollen and plant fossils, as well as human tools like an axe.
What interests me most of all here is the context. These remains were found in a Hills Group gravel pit to the north of Swindon about four years ago, in an area of mud and other fine-grained sediments apparently beneath one of the Thames terraces. The precise location has not been revealed. However, the history of the Thames terraces is pretty well known, and no doubt we will find out eventually where the finds fit into the glacial - interglacial sequence. However, it has been revealed that these finds are around 225,000 years old. That's surprisingly early, given that most woolly mammoth finds date from the Devensian glaciation, around 20,000 years ago. The press release refers to MIS7 as the age of the finds. That means they slot into a very mysterious interglacial episode now referred to as the Aveley Interglacial, between the Early Wolstonian glacial phase and the Saalian glaciation of Northern Europe. But some authorities think that the late Wolstonian is the equivalent of the Saalian, which means that the Aveley Interglacial (between 243,000 and 191,000 years ago) may have been a time of oscillating interstadial climate. As I have said in many earlier posts, the Wolstonian glacial episode remains very difficult to decipher.
The sequence of climatic changes:
MIS 3 – 57,000 mid-Devensian
MIS 4 – 71,000 Onset of Last Glacial Period / Weichselian / Devensian / Wisconsin in North America
PS. Thanks to Tony for drawing attention to this interim report:
THE MAMMOTH GRAVEYARD QUARRYThe fossils are mostly of steppe mammoth (Mammuthus trogontherii), a species inhabiting open grassland habitats across Eurasia before 200,000 years ago. These remains were mostly uncovered in the base of a former river channel, possibly of what is now the Thames, and usually lying against large boulders. These boulders were mostly of a rounded shape, indicating they had been moved along the bed by very rapidly flowing water. Overlying the mammoth bones were fine gravels and sands. These were also deposited in a channel, but one in which water velocity was much lower, and certainly too slow to move the fossils. Given that the bones are unabraded, they cannot have moved far. It therefore seems likely that the mammoths died close to or within the channel and that subsequent movement was sufficient only to lodge them against the boulders.
Samples taken from the sands and gravels have been analysed to date the site as well as to recover plant and invertebrate bones. Measurements made using the Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) technique by Prof. Phil Toms at the University of Gloucestershire show that the mammoths died around 225,000 years ago. This age is significant as it coincides with a warm episode of the Pleistocene geological epoch (the period from 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago, commonly called the 'Ice Age'). Indeed, the modern range of beetles found in samples from the sands and gravels, and studied by Dr Enid Allison at Canterbury Archaeological Trust, suggests they formed in a climate only slightly cooler than today. Nevertheless, and unlike now, the landscape around the mammoth graveyard would have been open grassland lacking in trees, as evidenced by the ecological preferences of molluscs (snails) studied by Dr Matthew Law of L-P Archaeology. In other words, the landscape would have been perfect grazing for the steppe mammoth.
Used to hear about sundry archaeological finds in the gravel pits north of Swindon whilst working for both Wiltshire Libraries, and later on, Wiltshire Environmental Services Department. I had contact with the Minerals Officer in the latter role. He and his Deputy were both Geographers and I hear from them occasionally although we are all retired. The same goes for the chief Wiltshire Archaeologist.
ReplyDeleteThe sheer scale of those gravel pits is phenomenal -- take a look on the satellite images! With that amount of gravel working over the years, I suppose there must have been many random finds which might have helped in the dating of the terraces.......
ReplyDeleteYour comments on glaciation possibly affecting North Swindon/Oxfordshire/ Swindon get me wondering about the original provenance and possible movement as an erratic of the large 16kg flint core found first by a farmer near the West Kennett Pallisades near West Kennett Farm, and more recently investigated by Wessex Archaeology - see my Facebook Post 21/12/21.
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