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H 276 x W 203 mm

79 pages

53 figures, 3 tables (colour throughout)

Published Oct 2025

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781805830863

Digital: 9781805830870

DOI 10.32028/9781805830863

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Jersey Heritage Research Series

The Neolithic in Jersey

By Alison Sheridan, Emmanuel Ghesquière, Cyril Marcigny

Contributions by Hélène Pioffet

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This second volume in Jersey’s Archaeological Research Framework offers a detailed study of the island’s Neolithic period, its links to the Channel Islands and NW France, and outlines key research questions. It provides a foundation for future studies and heritage protection efforts.

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Contents

Preface

Chapter 1. General introduction and overview

Chapter 2. Before the Neolithic: A glimpse into the Mesolithic of the Channel Islands

Chapter 3. The Neolithisation of Jersey and the other Channel Islands, and the Early Neolithic, c. 4900–4700 BC

Chapter 4. The Middle Neolithic I (c. 4700/4600–4300 BC): development of an Insular Neolithic, while remaining connected – just – to the neighbouring mainland

Chapter 5. The Middle Neolithic II (4300–3400 BC): the ‘golden age’ of megalithic (and drystone) funerary monument construction in Jersey (c. 4300–3900 BC), followed by a period (c. 3900–3400 BC) characterised by the near-absence of evidence

Chapter 6. The Late-Final Neolithic (and Chalcolithic), a long (c. 3400–2300 BC) and poorly-understood period

Chapter 7. Conclusions

Acknowledgements

Bibliography

About the Author

Alison Sheridan is a Research Associate and former Principal Curator of Early Prehistory in the Department of Scottish History and Archaeology, National Museums Scotland. As the UK, Isle of Man and Channel Islands co-ordinator of the French-led research project, Projet JADE, she has investigated the axeheads and other artefacts made from jadeitite and other Alpine rocks that have been found in the Channel Islands. She has also worked with the late Ian Kinnes on the dating of the funerary monument of Les Fouaillages on Guernsey.


Emmanuel Ghesquière is in charge of archaeological prospection and excavations at the Institut National de Recherches Archéologiques Préventives (INRAP), Grand-Ouest, in Bourgébus, and a permanent member of the Centre de Recherche en Archéologie, Archéosciences, Histoire, Rennes (CReAAH). A specialist in the prehistory of Normandy and of the west of France more generally from the Mesolithic to the Bronze Age, he has directed excavations at the Neolithic cemetery of Fleury-sur-Orne since 2014.


Cyril Marcigny is the Deputy Director (Scientific and Technical) of INRAP, Grand-Ouest, in Bourgébus, and is a Faculty Member (and former Director of CReAAH) at the Université Rennes-I and II. He also teaches at the École du Louvre and is a member of the Pre- and Protohistory Section of the Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques at the École nationale des Chartres. He brings his encyclopaedic knowledge of the Neolithic in Normandy, and in western France more generally, to bear on interpreting Jersey’s Neolithic.


Hélène Pioffet is Conservatrice du Patrimoine (Curator of Heritage) in charge of the département of Morbihan, based at the Service regional de l’Archéologie in Rennes, and a permanent member of CReAAH. She is a specialist in Neolithic pottery, not only of France and the Channel Islands (having produced the definitive report on the assemblage from Les Fouaillages, for example) but also of Britain and Ireland. Her work on Channel Islands Neolithic pottery has clarified its development and its relationship with French ceramic traditions.