book cover
Download Sample PDF

H 290 x W 205 mm

210 pages

Illustrated throughout in colour and black & white (125 colour plates)

Published Mar 2018

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781784918033

Digital: 9781784918040

Recommend to a librarian

Keywords
Cornwall; Archaeology; Palaeoenvironmental studies; Landscape archaeology; prehistory; molluscs; British archaeology; Multiperiod

The Gwithian Landscape: Molluscs and Archaeology on Cornish Sand Dunes

By Thomas Walker, Thomas M. Walker

Contributions by Rowena Y. Banerjea, C. Rob Batchelor

Paperback
£38.00
Includes PDF

PDF eBook
(personal use)
£16.00

PDF eBook
(institutional use)
£38.00

Add to basket

Add to wishlist

Gwithian, on the north coast of Cornwall, is a multiperiod archaeological site. The present work explores the palaeoenvironment of the area around the settlement sites, from the Neolithic, when sand dunes initially developed in the Red River valley, to the present post-industrial landscape.

READ MORE

Contents

Preface; Foreword by Jacqueline A. Nowakowski; Chapter I – Introduction ; Chapter II – Gwithian and its archaeological complex; Chapter III – Previous molluscan studies at Gwithian; Chapter IV – The current study at Gwithian; Chapter V – The coring transect; Chapter VI – Percussion cores; Chapter VII – Hand auger cores; Chapter VIII – Pollen analysis at Gwithian – by Dr. C. R. Batchelor ; Chapter IX – Chronology and discussion of the coring transect; Chapter X – Trench excavation; Chapter XI – Micromorphology analysis of a buried soil – by Dr R. Y. Banerjea; Chapter XII – Mollusc studies in the wider Gwithian landscape; Chapter XIII – Mining for tin and other metals; Chapter XIV – Discussion and conclusions; Conclusions; Bibliography

About the Author

THOMAS WALKER is Visiting Research Fellow in the Department of Archaeology, University of Reading. After a career in medicine he entered the world of archaeology in retirement, initially studying for a BSc at Reading and then progressing to a PhD. This monograph is based on his PhD thesis, which explored the palaeoenvironment of blown sands in Cornwall, principally at Gwithian.