Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T05:51:44.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Making Yourself at Home on an Island: The First 1000 Years (+?) of the Irish Mesolithic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 March 2013

Peter Woodman*
Affiliation:
c/o Dept of Archeology, University College, Cork

Abstract

This paper is based on the 2009 Europa lecture which concentrated on the issues surrounding the Early Holocene colonisation of Ireland and placed it both in a broader European context as well as asking why the initial settlement of Ireland should take place so late. It also reconsidered the reasons why there was a significant change in technology within the Irish Mesolithic. This paper suggests that over-emphasis has been placed on the Irish ‘Early’–Later Mesolithic change which had been thought to take place at a very specific point in time. Instead it is suggested that changes began to take place soon after settlement began in Ireland and that many of the classic Mesolithic type fossils, most notably microliths, began to vanish, perhaps around or just after 9000 years cal bp. It seems preferable to redefine the chronology of the Irish Mesolithic into two main phases the EARLIER and LATER Mesolithic with an, as yet undefined, chronological boundary between 8800 and 8600 cal bp. At the same time it recognises that there are significant changes (facies) within each of the major phases, some of which could even be regional. It should also be noted that not all of the facies need necessarily be associated with a distinct range of obvious type fossils.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ackerlund, A., Gustaffsson, P., Hammer, D., Lindgren, C., Olsson, E. & Wikell, R. 2003. Peopling a forgotten landscape. In Larsson, L., Kindgren, H., Knutsson, K., Loefler, D. & Åkerlund, A. (eds), Mesolithic on the Move: papers presented at the sixth international conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000, xxxiiixliv. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Ballin, T.B., Saville, A., Tipping, R. & Ward, T. 2010. An upper Palaeolithic flint and chert assemblage, Howburn Farm, South Lanarkshire: first results. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 29, 323–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, B., Edwards, B.J.N., Hallam, J. S. & Stuart, A.J. 1971. Skeleton of a Late Glacial elk associated with barbed points from Poulton le Fylde, Lancashire. Nature 232, 488–9CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barton, N. 1997. Stone Age Britain. London: English HeritageGoogle Scholar
Bayliss, A. & Woodman, P.C. 2009. A new Bayesian chronology for Mesolithic occupation at Mount Sandel, Northern Ireland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 75, 101–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bjerck, H. B. 1995. The North Sea Continent and the pioneer settlement of Norway. In Fischer, A. (ed.), Man and the Sea in the Mesolithic, 131–44. Oxford: Oxbow Monograph 53Google Scholar
Bjerck, H. B. 2009. Colonizing seascapes: comparative perspectives on the development of maritime relations in the Pleistocene/Holocene transition in the North West of Europe. In McCartan, S., Schulting, R., Warren, G. & Woodman, P. (eds), Mesolithic Horizons: Papers Presented at the Seventh International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Belfast 2005, 1623. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Brooks, A. J., Bradley, S. J., Edwards, R. J. & Goodwyn, N. 2011. Palaeolgeographic Maps of Northern Europe during the Postglacial period. Journal of Maps 7, 573–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burchell, J.P.T. 1931. Early Neanthropic man and his relation to the Ice Age. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society of East Anglia 6, 253303CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burenhult, G. 1984. The Archaeology of Carrowmore: Environmental Archaeology and the Megalithic Tradition at Carrowmore, County Sligo, Ireland. Stockholm: Institute of Archaeology, University of Stockholm/Theses and Papers in North European Archaeology 14Google Scholar
Coles, B.J. 1998. Doggerland: a speculative survey, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 64, 4582CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coles, J. 1972. The early settlement of Scotland: excavations at Morton, Fife. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 38, 284366Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D. 1954. Excavations at Star Carr: an Early Mesolithic settlement at Seamer, near Scarborough, Yorkshire. Cambridge: University PressGoogle Scholar
Collins, T. 2009. Hermitage, Ireland: life and death on the western edge of Europe. In McCartan, S., Schulting, R., Warren, G. & Woodman, P. (eds), Mesolithic Horizons: Papers Presented at the Seventh International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Belfast 2005, 876–9. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Costa, L. J. 2004. Corse Préhistorique. Paris: Editions ErranteGoogle Scholar
Costa, L.J., Sternke, F. & Woodman, P. 2001. The analysis of a lithic assemblage from Eleven Ballyboes, County Donegal. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 60, 18Google Scholar
Costa, L., Vigne, J.D., Bochersens, H., Desse-Berset, N., Heinz, C, Lanfranchi, F. de, Magdaleine, J., Ruas, M.-p., Thiebault, S. & Tozzi, C. 2003. Early Settlement on Tyrrhenian islands (8th millennium B.C.): Mesolithic adaptation to local resources in Corsica and northern Sardinia. In Larsson, L., Kindgren, H., Knutsson, K., Loefler, D. & Akerlund, A. (eds), Mesolithic on the Move: papers presented at the sixth international conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000, 311. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Costa, L.J., Sternke, F. & Woodman, P.C. 2005. Degeneration or adaptation: the transformation of lithic technology during the Mesolithic in Ireland. Antiquity 79, 1933CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coxon, P. 2008. Landscapes of the last glacial-interglacial transitions: a time of amazingly rapid change in Ireland. In Davenport, J. L., Sleeman, D. P. & Woodman, P.C. (eds), Mind the Gap: postglacial colonisation of Ireland. Dublin: Irish Naturalists' Journal Special Supplement, 4562Google Scholar
David, A. 1990. The Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Settlement of Wales. Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of LancasterGoogle Scholar
Dumont, J. 1985. A preliminary report on the Mount Sandel micro-wear study. In Woodman, (ed.) 1985, 6170Google Scholar
Edwards, J. & Brooks, A. 2008. The island of Ireland: drowning the myth of an Irish landbridge. In Davenport, J. L., Sleeman, D.P. & Woodman, P.C. (eds), Mind the Gap: Postglacial colonisation of Ireland, 1934. The Irish Naturalist Journal (special supplement)Google Scholar
Eogan, G. 1963. A Neolithic habitation site and megalithic tomb in Townleyhall Townland, Co. Louth. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 93, 3781Google Scholar
Finlay, N., Warren, G, & Wickham-Jones, C.R. 2002. The Mesolithic in Scotland: east meets west. Scottish Archaeological Journal, 24(2), 101–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gale, S. T. & Hunt, C.O. 1990. Kirkhead Cave, an Upper Palaeolithic site in Northern England. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 51, 283304CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghilardi, B. & O Connell, M. in press. Early Holocene vegetation and climate dynamics with particular reference to the 8.2 event: pollen and macrofossil evidence from a small lake in Western Ireland. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 21Google Scholar
Gooder, J. 2003 East Barns, East Lothian [radiocarbon dates]. Discovery & Excavation in Scotland 4, 159Google Scholar
Gooder, J. 2007. Excavation of a Mesolithic house at East Barns, East Lothian, Scotland: an interim report. In Waddington, C. & Pedersen, K. (eds) Mesolithic Studies in the North Sea Basin and Beyond, 4959. Oxford: OxbowGoogle Scholar
Fuglestvedt, I. 2003, Enculturating the landscape beyond Doggerland. In Larsson, L., Kindgren, H., Knutsson, K., Loefler, D. & Akerlund, A. (eds), Mesolithic on the Move: papers presented at the sixth international conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000, 103–7. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Hall, V. 2011. The Making of Ireland's Landscape Since the Ice Age. Cork: Collins PressGoogle Scholar
Hanley, K. & Hurley, F.M.L (eds). Forthcoming. Archaeologies of Cork. Vols 1 & 2. Dublin: National Roads Authority Scheme monographsGoogle Scholar
Hansen, K.M. & Pedersen, K.B. 2006. With or without bones – late Palaeolithic hunters in South Zealand. In Hansen, K.M. & Pedersen, K.B. (eds), Across the Western Baltic, 93110. Vordingsborg: Sydsjaellands MuseumGoogle Scholar
Hesjedal, A., Damm, C., Olsen, B. & Olsen, B. 1996. Arkeologi på Slettnes: Dokumentasjon av 11,000 års Bosetning. Tromsø: Tromsø Museums Skrifter 26Google Scholar
Housley, R. A., Gamble, C. S., Street, M. & Pettitt, P. 1997. Radiocarbon evidence for the Lateglacial human recolonisation of northern Europe. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 63, 2554CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isarin, R.F.B., Renssen, H. & Vandenberghe, J. 1998. The impact of the North Atlantic Ocean on the Younger Dryas climate in northwestern and central Europe. Journal of Quaternary Science 13(5), 447–533.0.CO;2-B>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacobi, R. & Higham, T. 2009. The Early Late Glacial re-colonisation of Britain: new radiocarbon evidence from Gough's Cave southwest England. Quaternary Science Reviews 28, 18951913CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jessen, K. 1949. Studies in Late Quaternary deposits and flora-history of Ireland. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 52B, 85209Google Scholar
Mallory, J. P. & Hartwell, B. N. 1997. Down in prehistory. In Proudfoot, L. (ed.), Down: History and Society, 132. Dublin: Geography PublicationsGoogle Scholar
McCartan, S. B. 2003. Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in the Isle of Man: adaptations to an island environment. In Larsson, L., Kindgren, H., Knutsson, K., Loeffler, D. & Åkerlund, A. (eds), Mesolithic on the Move. Papers Presented at the Sixth International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Stockholm 2000, 331–9. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P.A. 1976. The Palaeolithic and the Mesolithic. In Renfrew, C. (ed.), British Prehistory: a new outline, 4199. London: DuckworthGoogle Scholar
Mercer, J. 1970. Flint tools from the present tidal zone Lussa Bay, Isle of Jura, Argyll. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 102, 130CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mercer, J. 1974. Glenbatrick Waterhole, a microlithic site on the Isle of Jura. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 105, 932CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, G.F. 1941. The reindeer in Ireland. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 46B, 183–8Google Scholar
Mitchell, G.F. 1955. The Mesolithic site a Toome Bay, Co. Derry. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 18, 116Google Scholar
Mitchell, G.F. 1989. Man and Environment in Valentia Island. Dublin. Royal Irish AcademyGoogle Scholar
Movius, H.L. 1940. An early post-glacial archaeological site at Cushendun, Co. Antrim. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 46C, 184Google Scholar
Myers, A. 1988. Scotland inside and outside of the British mainland Mesolithic. Scottish Archaeological Review 5, 23–9Google Scholar
Pettitt, P. B., 2008. The British Upper Palaeolithic in Pollard, J (ed.) Prehistoric Britain 1857. Oxford: BlackwellsGoogle Scholar
Price, C.R. 2003. Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene Small Mammals in South West Britain. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 347Google Scholar
Ryan, M.F. 1980. An Early Mesolithic site in the Irish midlands. Antiquity 54, 46–7Google Scholar
Reynier, M. 2005. Early Mesolithic Britain: origins, developments and directions. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 393CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saville, A. 2003. A flint core tool from Wig Sands, Kircolm, near Stranraer, and a consideration of the absence of core tools in the Scottish mesolithic. Transaction of the Dumfriesshire & Galloway Natural History & Antiquarian Society (3rd ser) 77, 1322Google Scholar
Saville, A. 2008. The beginning of the Later Mesolithic in Scotland. In Sulgostowska, Z. & Tomaszewski, A.J. (eds), Man-Millennia-Environment: studies in honour of Romauld Schild, 207–14. Warsaw: Polish Academy of SciencesGoogle Scholar
Saville, A. & Ballin, T.B. 2009. Upper Palaeolithic evidence from Kilmelfort Cave Argyll: a revaluation of the evidence. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 138, 945Google Scholar
Saville, A., Hardy, K., Miket, R. & Ballin, T.B. 2012. An Corran, Staffin: a rockshelter with Mesolithic and later occupation. http://www.sair.org.uk./sair51Google Scholar
Schulting, R. 2009. Worms Head and Caldey Island (south Wales, UK) and the question of Mesolithic territories. In McCartan, S., Schulting, R., Warren, G. & Woodman, P. (eds), Mesolithic Horizons: Papers Presented at the Seventh International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, Belfast 2005, 354–61. Oxbow: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Takamiya, H. 2006. An unusual case? Hunter-gatherer adaptations to an island environment: a case study from Okinawa, Japan. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 1(1), 4966CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terberger, T. 2006. The Mesolithic Hunter-fisher-gatherers on the North European Plain. In Hansen, K.M & Hansen, K. B. (eds), Across the Western Baltic, 111–85. Vordingsborg: Sydsjaellands MuseumGoogle Scholar
Van Gijn, A. 2009. Use wear analysis of a sample of blades and cores from the excavations at the site of site of Port of Larne, Ireland. Report submitted to ADS (Belfast)Google Scholar
Waddington, C., Bailey, G., Bayliss, A. & Milner, N. 2007. Howick in its North Sea context. In Waddington, C. & Pedersen, K. (eds), Mesolithic Settlement in the North Sea Basin: a case study from Howick, North-East England, 201–24. Oxford: Oxbow BooksGoogle Scholar
Warren, G. 2003. Living in the trees: Mesolithic people and the woods of Ireland. Archaeology Ireland 17(3), 20–3Google Scholar
Whelan, C.B. 1938. Studies in the significance of the Irish Stone Age: the cultural sequence. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 44C, 115–38Google Scholar
Wickham-Jones, C.R. 1990. Rhum: Mesolithic and later sites at Kinloch, excavations 1984–6. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Monograph 7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1974. Settlement patterns of the Irish Mesolithic. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 36–7, 1–16Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1977a. Recent excavations at Newferry, Co. Antrim. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 43, 155–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1977b. A narrow blade Mesolithic site at Glynn, County Antrim. Ulster Journal of Archaeology 40, 1221Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1978. The Mesolithic in Ireland. Oxford: British Archaeological Report 58Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1981. The postglacial colonization of Ireland: the human factors. In O'Corráin, D. (ed.), Irish Antiquity: essays and studies presented to Professor M. J. O'Kelly, 93110. Cork: Tower BooksGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1985. Excavations at Mount Sandel, 1973–77. Belfast: HMSO. Northern Ireland Archaeological Monograph 2Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1987. Excavations at Cass ny Hawin. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 53, 122CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1992. The Komsa Culture, a re-examination of its position in the Stone Age of Finnmark. Acta Archaeologica 63, 5776Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1997. Killuragh. In Bennett, I. (ed.), Excavations 1996, 67–8. Dublin: WordwellGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 1999. The early Post Glacial Settlement of Arctic Europe. In Cziela, E., Kersting, T. & Pratsch, S. (eds), Den Bogen Spannen, 297312. Weisbach: Beier and BeranGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P.C. 2009. Report on the lithic artefacts from the Container Park Site Report at the port of Larne. Report submitted to ADS (Belfast)Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C. forthcoming. Report on the lithic assemblage from Toome Bridge, County Antrim. In Dunlop, C., The A6 Toome Bypass, County Antrim, appendix 1, I–XCII. Belfast: Northern Archaeological ConsultantsGoogle Scholar
Woodman, P. C. & Anderson, E. 1990. The Irish Later Mesolithic: a partial picture. In Vermersch, M.P. & van Peer, P. (eds), Contributions to the Mesolithic in Europe, 377–87. Leuven: University Press.Google Scholar
Woodman, P.C., McCarthy, M. & Monaghan, N. 1997. The Irish Quaternary Faunas Project, Quaternary Science Reviews 16, 129–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar