Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:00:36.806Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Report on the Petrological Identification of Stone Axes from Yorkshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 September 2014

Extract

This is the first report by C.B.A. Group IV (Yorkshire) on the petrological identification of stone axes since 1962 when the group undertook to help members, in part financially and in part with organisation, to obtain sections and petrological identifications of implements in their possession. Some of the sectioned artifacts are in the possession of individual members but the bulk belongs to public museum collections.

The programme was initiated by Mr D. P. Dymond, a former group secretary, and since 1964 has been continued by Mr Laurence Keen. A considerable quantity of axes remains to be sectioned. The rate of sectioning at present is about one hundred and twenty a year. Attempts by the writers to increase the rate of sectioning have been unsuccessful because it has proved impossible to interest capable technicians in the project. However, grateful acknowledgment must be made here to Mr E. D. Evens who has willingly arranged for the sectioning of virtually all the axes in the following Register. The majority of thin sections was made by Mr E. W. Seavill. The writers would also like to thank Dr F. S. Wallis, who has also kindly checked the geological part of this report, Dr D. W. Humphries, Professor W. F. Grimes, Mr J. Bartlett who has kindly made available for publication material in his keeping, Mr H. Coope, and Dr K. C. Dunham, who have made the petrological identifications.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1971

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

REFERENCES

Bunch, B. and Fell, C., 1949. ‘A Stone Axe Factory at Pike of Stickle, Great Langdale, Westmorland’, PPS, XV, 120.Google Scholar
Clarke, R. R., 1960. East Anglia.Google Scholar
Dakyn, J. R. and Fox-Strangways, C., 1885. The Geology of Bridlington Bay, Memoir of the Geological Survey.Google Scholar
Dymond, D. P., 1966. ‘Ritual monuments at Rudston’, PPS, XXXII, 8695.Google Scholar
Evens, E. D. et al. , 1962. ‘Fourth Report … on the Petrological Identification of Stone Axes’, PPS, XXVIII, 209–66.Google Scholar
Harker, A., 1891. ‘Petrological Notes on some Boulders from the Boulder Clay of East Yorkshire’, Proc. Yorks. Geol. Soc., XI, 409–23.Google Scholar
Holmes, A. and Harwood, A. F., 19261928. ‘The age and composition of the Whin Sill’, Mineralogical Magazine, XXI, 493542.Google Scholar
Keen, L., 1965. Yorks. Arch. J., XLI, 354–5.Google Scholar
Jope, E. M., 1953. ‘The Porcellanite axes of the north of Ireland’, UJA, XV, 3153.Google Scholar
Livens, R. G., 1958. ‘The Petrology of Scottish Stone Implements’, PSAS, XCII, 5669.Google Scholar
Manby, T. G., 1963. ‘The excavation of the Willerby Wold Long Barrow’, PPS, XXIX, 173205.Google Scholar
Manby, T. G., 1965. ‘The Distribution of rough-out “Cumbrian” and related stone axes of Lake District origin’, Trans. Cumb. and Westmor. Arch. Soc., LXV, 137.Google Scholar
McInnes, I., 1964. ‘A Class II Henge in the East Riding of Yorkshire’, Antiquity, XXXVIII, 218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, J. W., 1964. ‘Excavations at Beacon Hill, Flamborough Head’, Yorks. Arch. J., XLI, 191202.Google Scholar
Mortimer, J. R., 1905. Forty Years Researches in British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire.Google Scholar
R.C.A.M. (Wales), 1957. R.C.A.M. Caernarvonshire I, xli–lvii.Google Scholar
Roe, F. E. S., 1966, ‘The Battle-Axe Series in Britain’, PPS, XXXII, 199245.Google Scholar
St Joseph, J. K., 1968. ‘Air Reconnaissance: Recent Results, 14’, Antiquity, XLII, 130–1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stather, J. W., 1901. ‘Notes on East Yorkshire boulders’, Proc. Yorks. Geol. Soc., XIV, 237–44.Google Scholar