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ROUTLEDGE LIBRARY EDITIONS: ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume 6
THE PREHISTORIC SETTLEMENT OF BRITAIN
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THE PREHISTORIC SETTLEMENT OF BRITAIN
RICHARD BRADLEY
First published in 1978 This edition first published in 2015 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN and by Routledge 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 1978 Richard Bradley All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN: 978-1-138-79971-4 (Set) eISBN: 978-1-315-75194-8 (Set) ISBN: 978-1-138-80828-7 (Volume 6) eISBN: 978-1-315-75067-5 (Volume 6) Publisher’s Note The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality of this book but points out that some imperfections from the original may be apparent. Disclaimer The publisher has made every effort to trace copyright holders and would welcome correspondence from those they have been unable to trace.
The Prehistoric Settlement of Britain Richard Bradley Department o f Archaeology Reading University
Routledge & Kegan Paul London, Henley and Boston
First published in 1978 by Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd 39 Store Street, London W C iE 7D D , Broadway House, Newtown Road, Henley-on- Thames, Oxon R G q i E N and 9 Park Street, Boston, M ass. 02108, U SA Set in Baskerville and printed in Great Britain by Lowe & Brydone Printers Limited Thetford, Norfolk (£) Richard Bradley, 1978 No part o f this book may be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fo r the quotation o f brief passages in criticism British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Bradley, Richard, b.1946 The prehistoric settlement o f Britain. - (Archaeology o f Britain). 1. Man, Prehistoric - Great Britain I. Title II. Series 936.1*01 GN805 78-40619 I S B N o 7100 8993 7
For Bari Hooper and Collin Bowen
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Men are made of what is made, The meat, the drink, the life, the corn, Laid up by them, in them reborn. And self-begotten cycles close About our way; indigenous art And simple spells make unafraid The haunted labyrinths o f the heart. Edwin Muir, The Island
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Contents
1 2 3
Preface Introduction Still Life o f Sherds A Pure Soil Clearance and Colonisation
xiii i
5
T illage and H ard Labour A rable and Pasture
29
4
R igidly Liturgical Movements Transhum ance and Nomadism
55
5
T h e H ealing o f the Woods H unting and Gathering
73
T h e M agnitude o f Antique Fragments Possibilities and Suggestions
97
6
Abbreviations
131
Bibliography
133
Bibliographical Index G eneral Index
M7 I51
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Figures
2: i
M esolithic and early N eolith ic rad iocarb on dates in southern E n glan d .
7
2 :2
T h e location o f pre-E lm D ecline clearings in C u m b ria.
10
2 :3
T h e percen tage o f tree pollen in d ated clearan ce horizons.
14
2 :4
Profiles o f possible spade furrow s beneath excavated barrow s.
17
2 :5
T h e size o f m ed ieval villages in Bedfordshire in relation to the extent o f their arab le land
23
2 :6
T h e distribution o f R om an o-B ritish settlem ents in tw o areas o f north-east E n glan d .
25
2 :7
T h e relative frequ ency o f dated clearan ce horizons.
27
3:1
T h e percen tage o f sheep bones on later Bronze A g e and Iron A g e sites in E ngland and W ales.
38
3 :2
T h e distributions o f Iron A g e sickles and four-post structures.
43
3 :3
T h e ch ronological distribution o f evid ence for arable farm ing.
44
3 :4
T h e ch ronological distribution o f evid ence for pastoral farm ing.
52
3 :5
T h e arable/pastoral ratio in dated clearan ce horizons.
52
4:1 4 :2
T h e relationship betw een hut d iam eter and elevation in part o f north-w est W ales. T h e d iam eter o f stone-built huts on D artm oor.
61 62
4 :3 4 :4
T h e relationship betw een hill fort area and elevation in the north W elsh M arches. In terpretation plan o f T r e ’r C eiri hill fort.
63 63
4 :5 4 :6
T h e range o f dom estic pottery under barrow s on the W iltshire downs. T h e relationship o f Iron A g e salt prod u ction to the a gricu ltu ral cycle.
64 68
5:1
T h e intensity o f occu pation in relation to the num ber o f separate activities on M esolithic
5 :2
sites: (a) in L o w lan d B ritain ; (b) in H ig h lan d B ritain. T h e n um ber o f separate activities in relation to the floor area o f M esolithic shelters.
75 77
5 :3
G roups o f M esolith ic pits at F arn ham , S urrey, and H a va n t, H am pshire.
78
5 :4
T h e interpretation o f N eolithic and B ronze A g e flint scatters in part o f W harfed ale, Yorkshire.
81
6:1
T h e siting o f W in d m ill H ill and its extern al contacts.
104
6 :2
T h e d a tin g o f new and aband oned clearings in the later N eolithic.
106
6 :3
C o n tin u ity and d iscontin uity o f lan d use based on finds from barrow s in southern E n glan d .
6 :4
T h e m ain concentrations o f M id d le B ron ze A g e m etalw ork in southern E n glan d in relation to m ajor enclosures o f the period.
113 120
T ables
I
T h e N eolith ic clearan ce at H o ck h a m M ere
2
T h e relationship b etw een lan d use and the deposition o f flint scrapers at B room e H eath
3
F req u en cy o f association betw een dom estic and gam e anim als in m ajor inland caves o ccu p ied in the L a te N eolith ic to E a rly B ronze A g e
4
F req u en cy o f association b etw een dom estic and gam e anim als in m ajor inland caves
5
A g e distribution o f anim al bones on m inor Iron A g e sites, b y n u m ber o f separate
occu p ied in the Iron A g e occurren ces 6
8 45 66 67 70
F req u en cy o f association betw een the prin cip al dom estic and gam e anim als on Iron A g e coastal sites in Scotlan d
87
7 8
D istribution o f anim al bones at D u n M o r V a u l
87
P rin cip al p lan t foods, N eolithic to Iron A g e. T otals o f m acroscopic id en tification
89
9
P rin cip al bird rem ains on coastal sites in A tla n tic S co tlan d b y n u m ber o f separate occurrences P rin cip a l fish rem ains on coastal sites in A tla n tic S co tlan d b y n u m ber o f
90
10
separate occurren ces T h e m ean n um ber o f com partm ents in C ly d e cairns in relation to their heigh t
91
11 12
B ronze A g e lan d use at Sw arkestone, D erbyshire
a bove sea level
103 114
Preface
T h is book has happ ened over a lon g period and
also read the text and is responsible for the
m an y debts h ave accru ed in its com position. T h e
E nglish translation. V e rn a
most obvious are for the use o f published and
R ich ard s k in d ly drafted some o f the origin al
C a re
and J u lia n
un published m aterial and these are a ck n ow
d raw ings and Son ia Burgess produced a clean
ledged at approp riate points in the text. B ut
typescript from an alm ost u n read able palim psest.
beyond these are other debts w hich no such
Bill and J u d i S tartin put m e u p w hen I b egan
ackn ow led gm ent can pay. I ow e m ore to m y
w ork on the book and K a th erin e has put up
teachers and colleagues than they m igh t care
w ith me as I brou gh t it to a protracted con
to agree. T w o o f them , B arry C u n liffe and
clusion. It is d ed icated to two friends: B ari
M ich a el F ulford, have read and com m ented on
H ooper, for rem ind in g me, m ore than anyone
the m anuscript. I h ave also discussed m uch o f
else, h ow intellectual curiosity is a source o f
this m aterial w ith J o h n B arrett and B rendan
en joym en t; and C o llin B ow en, w ho has shared
O ’C on nor. N one o f them , I suspect, has coaxed
his ideas so lib e ra lly that an y m erits o f this book
m e from the errors o f m y w ays. A la n D in gle
are not the a u th o r’s alone.
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Introduction
Chapter
/
Still Life of Sherds
w as innocent o f satire. F lan n O ’Brien was not.
A word about this Royal Myles na gCopaleen Institute o f Archaeology.. . . It would be rash to suppose that the Institute was just a gatherum o f clay-minded prodnoses. Each branch o f research has a sub-institute o f its own. . . . Within the Royal Institute you have, for instance, the Institute o f Comparative Bronzes. This body is con cerned only with time-bronze progressions. Flann O’ Brien, from T h e Best o f M yles (1968)
B ut, like all creatures, it seizes on real features o f its subject. T h e fram ew ork o f prehistoric studies is based upon both o f these sources. T h e bronzes provide a chronological schem e w hich unites local sequences over m uch o f E u rop e and even tu ally relates them to a historical chronology. T h e ceram ics can locate m ore restricted ph eno m ena. T h e problem is w hen these objects lose all connection w ith the m en w ho m ade them and are studied as an end in them selves, a herm etic exercise in self-valid atin g skill. A b o u t the tim e
T h is book was plann ed as synthesis and em erged as speculation.
has
In betw een cam e a
phase o f B infordian fellow -travelling. W h y this u n certain ty o f aim ? W h y so m any changes o f p lan? C o m p lete synthesis is alw ays im possible since it presupposes finite d a ta and the exhaustion o f all approaches. B ut it is p a rticu la rly d ifficult w hen so little o f this basic d a ta has been prop erly collected or recorded. A d d to that the frustration that little carefu lly collected m aterial is ever accessible. F ew excavations reach the prin ter; a cad em ic distinction is ap p a ren tly m easured by the n um ber o f projects aband oned . B u t to turn
that O ’Brien was w riting, the A m erican arch ae ologist, W a lter T a y lo r, was lam basting the sam e e v a sio n : F ellow students . . . h ave accused the archaeologist o f tattin g endless taxonom ic rosettes out o f the sam e old ball o f ‘m aterial c u ltu re’ and m ain tained that his findings are next to useless for the purposes o f history and cu ltu re study. It seems that archaeologists are becom ing, as T o lsto y once said o f m odern historians, like d e a f m en answ ering questions w h ich no one has asked them (1948).
entirely to theory w ould be dull for both author
T h e ‘ tim e-bronze progressions’ w ere inevitable.
and reader, and to discuss m ethod ology w ith ou t
W ith o u t this fram ew ork there w ou ld have been
a pprop riate d a ta is as likely to w in converts
no tim e-scale, and its long tim e-scale is the one
as a p a rty political broadcast. For these reasons
contrib u tion that prehistory can offer to other
alone, w h a t has em erged is a trial piece, from
disciplines. T h e study o f p ottery could have served a sim ilar end, b u t here chron ology and ex p la
w hich outlines can be copied or erased. It is a personal interpretation o f biased and elusive
nation h ave becom e so tangled together that
evidence.
discussion often ends in d eadlock. T o show chron
T h e title is o f course caricatu re. It is borrow ed from a pain tin g b y K le e , w ho, on this occasion,
ological relationships, cu ltu ral relations are inferred. T h ese have then taken over, at times
2
Introduction - Still Life o f Sherds
lea vin g a dubious historical n arrative in support
‘ R a d io carb o n dates for M id su m m er H ill C a m p
o f a circu lar argum en t. T h e C h ild e an ‘cu ltu re’ is not a testable hypothesis, b u t it is som etim es
have now ind icated that the L a T e n e invasions
an idee fixe. W h en C h ild e ’s schem e fails to offer
185 b .c .) ’ (Stanford, 1972, p. 308). T h e second area o f d evelop m en t has been in
the accep ta b le solution, the questions are ch an ged to a ccom m od ate the a n sw ers: J u d g e d b y these [C h ild e ’s] standards, the ea rly L a T e n e invasions from the M a rn e have been found defective b y several authorities. . . . I f . . . w e are ob liged to a p p ly less rigorous criteria, then . . . the M a rn ia n invasion . . . stands upon firm er grou n d (H a rd in g, D ., 1974, p. 230).
w ere as ea rly as perhaps c. 390 b .c. (420 db
the en viron m ental sciences, and in p a rticu la r in pollen analysis. T h is is no lon ger ju s t a tech nique
o f com p ilin g
b o ta n ical
and
clim atic
sequences, b u t has proved itself a d iscrim in atin g ju d g e o f hu m an a ctiv ity . M u c h can n ow be learn t o f ea rly land use, and studies o f the dis sem ination o f pollen m ay e v en tu a lly reveal the size and location o f the occu p ied areas. T h e analysis o f closely spaced sam ples has shed sur
T h e result has been a cu ltu ral fram ew ork w h ich
prising ligh t on early agricu ltu re, p a rticu la rly
owes som ething to changes in m etalw orkin g
w hen all the pollen grains h ave been cou nted . T h ree-d im en sion al pollen analysis, the stu d y o f
and not a little to a suspect ethnology. N ow it seems that the m ain areas o f study,
separate cores over a lim ited area, can also
at least b y those in the field, are to be settlem ents
help to localise prehistoric a ctiv ity . S ince peat
and even w hole landscapes. T h e re is n oth in g new
can be carb o n -d ated , m an y periods o f lan d use
to econ om ic prehistory. G ra h a m e C la rk p ro
can be tied d ire ctly to an absolute ch ro n ology.
d uced his grea t classic in 1952 and his a ch ieve
P reviou sly palaeobotanists had show n u n du e d e
m ent has not been m atch ed since. It is not p a r
ference to the arch aeologist’s assu m ptions: ‘T h e
ticu larly constructive to trace the d evelop m en t o f this clim ate o f opinion. T h e re is a tem ptation
L a te B ronze A g e com m unities in this area are regarded as h a vin g been n om ad ic w ith a p re
to d iscip lin ary a u to b io gra p h y that reveals the
d om in an tly
frustrated historian, and on this occasion it is
eq u ated w ith episode C 3’ (Birks, 1965). G ive n these opportunities, it seems w orth w h ile to exp lore the evid ence for prehistoric settlem ent.
better resisted. S ettlem en t a rch a eo lo g y is cer tain ly p opular, b u t in B ritain it seems to rest on a com prom ise. It is de rigueur to stu d y ‘settle
pastoral
econ om y
and
are
thus
ments in B elgic B rita in ’ (R o d w ell, 1976) or ‘ the
A num ber o f basic econ om ic practices are dis cussed in the next four chapters. T h e final
F ood V essel econ om y’ (H e rity a n d E ogan , 1976).
ch ap ter, w h ich is m uch the longest, is an a ttem p t
B u t is this a n y h elp ? It m ust be asked w hether lan d scap e history can rea lly be studied using
to d ra w this evid ence together and to suggest how it m igh t ev en tu a lly form its ow n fram ew ork
an in tellectu al structure form ed alm ost en tirely
for the stu d y o f settlem ent patterns. T h is is
aroun d artefacts.
perhaps a w orth w h ile am bition , b u t the reader
T w o developm ents m ay provide a release. T h e
m ust be w arn ed that it is still ve ry m uch an
d evelopm en t o f rad iocarb on d a tin g at last holds
ideal. T h is book asks m ore questions than it can answ er and avoids m ore problem s than it solves.
ou t som e prospect o f b u ild in g sequences in d e pend ent o f d iagnostic artefacts, and indeed o f p u ttin g trad itio n al chronologies to the test. D e
B ut the attem p t is still w orth m akin g, p rovided it is understood that this is a stu d y o f the in fo rm a
spite the statistical u n certain ty a ttach ed to every
tion that is a lrea d y accessible. T h e em phasis
d ate, an in telligen t ap p licatio n o f this techn iqu e should ev en tu a lly p rovide both an absolute tim e-
rep eated ly falls on its p oten tial, rath er than its
scale and a m easure o f rates o f ch an ge. A t present con troversy over the tree rin g calib ra tio n o f rad iocarb on rules ou t an y d og m atic co n clu sion. B ut again there is a d an ger o f abuse:
present shortcom ings. T h e re are four areas w h ich d ra stica lly need to be explored before all the propositions in this book can be pu t to the test. U n til then a few gn om ic assertions can be useful in setting exam s.
Introduction - Still Life oj Sherds
3
T h e most im portant o f these problem s is the
T h e m ain reason for this situation has been a
selective destruction o f evidence. C hristopher
p ragm atic avoid ance o f form al analysis. T h ere is
T a y lo r has argued that the prehistoric landscape
a general terror o f theory. Som e review ers o b
can be d ivided into a ‘zone o f su rvival’ and a
viously think that N ew M exico is the seat o f
‘zone o f destruction ’ (1972). H e considers that this division cuts across the settlem ent pattern
the Spanish Inquisition. M eth od olog y is w id ely portrayed as a tiresome retreat from the data.
so com pletely that it can no longer be u n der
But the evidence never speaks for itself, and
stood. T h is depressing conclusion is nearly ju s ti
w ithou t questions there are no answers. C o n
fied. B ut it is still possible to locate some sites
troversy o f a sort can be felt, but reappraisal
in the zone o f destruction, althou gh it is un
soon turns into rem iniscence. O b jectives are
likely that a large sam ple can now be achieved.
rarely discussed. T h e critics have not been w on
It is also true that the q u ality o f the evidence
d erfu lly constructive. T h e y are content to parse
w ill v a ry rad ically betw een these zones. C ertain
the polem ic and to criticise its sentence structure.
areas, for instance the W essex d ow n lan d
or
R e p u n ctu ated , rew orded, the charges are exactly
D artm oor, dom inate the arch aeological literature
the sam e: ‘A rch aeo lo gy [here British arch ae
for reasons w hich are them selves part o f lan d scape history. T h e continuous pressure placed
ology] is undisciplined . . . an intuitive skill . . .
on the best resources means that the q u ality
(C larke, D .L ., 1968, xiii). W ith o u t better co llec
a
m an ipu lative
d exterity
learned
by
rote’
o f the rem ain in g m aterial can be in inverse
tion o f the basic m aterials, this is not likely to
proportion to its origin al significance. T h e w a y
change.
forw ard is perhaps to consider each area in
L astly, the bias towards econom ic evidence
relation to its potential for field survey and to
also means a bias tow ards a functionalist inter
w eigh t all distributions accord in gly.
pretation. T h e poor recovery o f econom ic d ata
B ut fieldw ork needs to be planned on a more
w eakens these explanations still m ore. A rc h a e
the
ology and an th rop ology in B ritain have quite
w hole o f the British Isles w ill ever be exam ined,
different em phases, although one can not help
all surveys w ill be a form o f sam pling. It w ould
n oticin g that kinship m odels can look like bronze
be sensible to m ake proper use o f the techniques
typologies. B y avoid in g the social m eanin g o f his
w hich have a lread y been devised for ob tain in g
m aterial, the archaeologist is choosing a rather
a representative pattern. T hese have been w id ely
narrow
discussed in A m e rica (e.g. M u eller, 1975), but their potential has been alm ost ignored in this country, w ith the result that financial resources
strictures w ere rude but not quite unfair (1976). T h is book is another exploration o f econom ic evidence, since this is alm ost all that has been
are still dissipated in hun ting for biased in form ation.
recorded. Because o f this self-denial it is not a com plete interpretation.
It is because so little inform ation has been co l lected on an approp riate basis that hypotheses are so hard to test. T h ere are very few reliable
the limits o f inference is finally an unprod u ctive exercise. It has led too m any prehistorians
rigorous basis. Since it is un likely
that
personal
m ythology.
L e a ch ’s
recent
T hese gaps m ay seem fatal. B ut to bew ail
figures for the m ovem ent o f settlem ent betw een
into the pessimism o f Sam uel B eckett: ‘ I have
different soils, or for changes in the num ber o f
nothin g to say, but I can on ly say to w h at extent
sites from one period to another, even though
I have nothing to sa y .’ A ltern atively one can be
such processes are w id ely claim ed in the litera
more foolhardy. T o quote W alter T a y lo r again :
used,
‘W h y should every arch aeological hypothesis
w ithou t any real w a y o f know in g w hether they
have to stand and be correct for all tim e? . . .
reflect a general trend. Few o f the ideas in this
W h y should arch aeology assume the pretentious
book can be tested for statistical significance,
burden o f in fa llib ility ? ’
ture. O n ly
a few case-studies can
be
since the sam ple w hich has been used is an accid en t o f acad em ic history.
T h is book contrives its ow n obsolescence.
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A Pure Soil
Chapter 2
Clearance and Colonisation
I like a plantation in a pure soil - that is, where people are not displanted to the end to plant others. . . . Planting o f countries is like planting o f woods, for you must take account to lease almost twenty years3 profit and expect your re compense in the end. . . . In a country o f plantation first look about what kind o f victual the country yields o f itself to hand, as chestnuts, walnuts, pine-apples, olives, dates, plums, cherries, wild honey and the like, and make use o f them. Then con sider what victual or esculent things there are which grow speedily and within the year, as parsnips, carrots, turnips, onions, radish, artichokes o f Jerusalem, maize, and the like. For wheat, barley and oats, they ask too much labour. . . . For beasts and birds take chiefly such as are least subject to diseases and multiply fastest, swine, goats, cocks, hens, turkeys, geese, house doves and the like. The victual in plantations ought to be expended almost as in a besieged town, that is, with certain allowance. Francis B acon,(O f Plantations3from Essays, or Counsels C iv il and M o ra l, 1625 Said Ysbaddaden Chief Giant. . . . ‘ When I have myself gotten that which I shall name to thee, then thou shalt get my daughter. . . . Dost see the great thicket yonder? . . . I must have it up rooted out o f the earth and burnt on the face o f the ground so that the cinders and ashes thereof be its manure; and that it be ploughed and sown so that it be ripe in the morning against the drying o f the
dew, in order that it may be made into meat and drink for the wedding guests and my daughter’s. And all this I must have done in one day.3 ‘ It is easy for me to get that, though thou think it is not easy.3 ‘ Culhwch and Olwen3, T h e M ab in ogion , trans. G. and T . Jones, 1949
INTRODUCTION
W h en J oh n A u b re y was w riting his Natural History o f Wiltshire in the second h a lf o f the seventeenth cen tu ry, his views o f early a gri cu ltu re w ere not surprisingly coloured b y w h at he knew o f A m erica. As so often, his sp ecu la tions have proved rem ark ab ly acute. In J a m a ica , and in other parts o f A m erica, e.g. in V irg in ia , the natives did burne dow n great woods, to cu ltivate the soil w ith m aiz and potato-roots, w hich plaines w ere there m ade to sowe corne. T h e y doe call these plains Savannas. W h o knows but Salisbury plaines, etc. m ight be m ade long time ago, and for the sam e reason? T h is suggestion, w hich w ould have seem ed so pecu liar w hen it was finally published in 1847, w ould h ard ly have surprised the anonym ous author(s) o f ‘C u lh w ch and O lw e n ’ . But, b y the nineteenth cen tu ry, little or nothing rem ained o f the n ative forest, and these ap p aren tly sim ple processes o f clearan ce had long since given w a y to m ore com plicated patterns o f m anagem ent (R ackh am , 1976). E ven w ithin the prehistoric
6
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
period, the evid ence for land clearan ce is re
this view d raw analogies w ith con tem p o rary
m ark ab ly com plex. It is the purpose o f this ch ap ter to consider some o f the w ays in w h ich
p ractice in northern E u rop e and w ith u n dou bted evidence for le a f collection in the Swiss N eolithic.
the n atural lan dscape was prepared.
T h e re are difficulties in the u n critical extension
T h e op en in g part o f this ch ap ter deals w ith actu al m ethods o f clearan ce, althou gh
o f these view s. G ro en m an -va n -W a aterin ge has
some
argued that sim ilar phenom ena can be created
atten tion w ill be paid to ch ronology, and to those
n atu ra lly (1968), and P enn ington , in p articu lar,
m odifications o f the forest w hich fall short o f
has
com plete rem oval. O th erw ise, clearan ce w ill be
occu rred in a period o f increased rain fall (1975).
shown
how
the
E lm
D eclin e
a ctu ally
taken as a d eliberate prep aration for farm ing.
T h is had the effect o f ch an gin g the com position
T h is definition confines the discussion to the
o f lake sedim ents and o f increasing the rate at
N eolithic and later periods, and the relevan ce o f
w hich pollen grains w ere deposited. T h e re are,
changes in the course o f M esolithic hu n tin g w ill
o f course, am biguities in this evidence, since
be considered sep arately. E ven w ith this lim i
increased rain fall and h u m a n ly generated erosion
tation, m uch o f the evidence is controversial
can both h ave played a part. O th e r authorities
and alm ost all o f it uneven. T h ere are few
see a fall in tem peratu re and a d eterioration
arch aeological sites show ing en viron m ental ev i
o f soils w ith in
dence and even few er palaeoecological studies
1966; P ennington, 1975).
this
cru cial
phase
(F renzel,
w hich allow a clear correlation w ith these. T h e
It is essential to separate the differen t strands
ecologist’s lon g-standin g interest in forest history
in the argum ent. Som e o f the difficulties m ay
has also m eant that m uch
evidence
now have been p a rtly offset b y w ork in n orth
em phasises N eolithic p ractice at the expense o f
w est S cotlan d (P ennington et aL, 1972). H ere
o f the
later developm ents. The
second
part
the situation is sim plified in tw o ve ry im p ortan t o f this
chap ter
w ill
be
w a ys: the areas chosen for study show ed no
concerned w ith the transfer o f settlem ents into
arch aeological evidence for clearan ce at this early
the new ly cleared areas.
d a te;
and
in
an y
case
they
seem
to
h ave
supported too low a proportion o f elm in the T H E B E G I N N I N G OF A G R I C U L T U R A L
T h e actu al onset o f N eolithic clearan ce is not
n atu ral forest for a n y econ om y based on its exp loitation to have been w orth w h ile. In fact, elm was on ly really com m on in parts o f Irelan d ,
easy to recognise. T h ere is still no real agreem ent
south-w est W ales and C o rn w a ll (Birks, D eaco n
on
w h ich
and P eglar, 1975). D espite these q u alification s,
marks the division betw een zones V i l a and b
there was still evidence for an elm d ecline in
in the b o ta n ical literatu re and b etw een the M esolithic and the N eolithic in a rch aeology.
this area, an observation w h ich m akes it difficult to accep t a pu rely an th rop ogen ic origin . T h is
CLEARANCE
the
n ature
Its clearest
o f the
E lm
characteristic
D ecline,
is its virtu al
syn-
agrees w ith another observation, one w hich has
chroneity across the British Isles (Sm ith, A . G .
alw ays created
and P ilcher, 1973). T h e re is d ifficu lty in choosing
presentation o f elm pollen seems to have d ropped
difficulties:
alth ou gh
the
re
a single exp lan ation , especially since the Elm
a b ru p tly close to 3000 b .c., the d etailed v a r i
D ecline is such a com plex phenom enon. Iversen
ations in other species at this tim e are not p a rticu
interpreted the initial fall in elm pollen as a
larly consistent and, taken on their ow n, w ou ld not
p urely clim atic effect and on ly saw its later
alw ays be enough to suggest hum an a ctiv ity . T o
cu rtailm en t as a ‘lan d n a m ’ or lan d -clearan ce
some extent the presentation o f pollen diagram s
phase (19 4 1). M o re recen tly there has been a tenden cy to extend the cu ltu ral in terpretation
b y p ercen tage rath er than b y absolute frequ en cy m ay be to b lam e for this confu sion; it can even
to the earlier episode, and it has now been
p roduce q u ite spurious episodes w h ich are a
pa rtly exp lain ed b y the selective gath erin g o f
p rod u ct o f the m ethod itself (cf. P enn ington ,
le a f fodder (Troels Sm ith, i960). Proponents o f
! 973> P- 96 )-
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
7
A m ore rew ard in g approach m ay be the one
drained soils into less favou rable areas; and, on a
adopted b y Sims at H o ckh am M ere, w here a
larger scale, it also contradicts the notion that
com plex E lm D eclin e was revealed b y absolute
farm in g was gra d u ally introduced across E urope
pollen analysis and certain ly included cereals
from south-east to north-west. In the second case,
and other indicants o f hum an a ctiv ity (1973,
A m m erm an and C av alli-S fo rza have tried to
T a b le 1). Sims him self view s the E lm D ecline
show that the earliest rad iocarb on dates for
as a result o f m an ’s interference, bu t also accepts
N eolithic a ctiv ity in different regions support
that there is evidence for clim atic deterioration
the spread o f agriculture from its traditional
in this period. H e has suggested that a result
areas o f origin at an approxim ately constant
o f this ch an ge in clim ate and o f soil deterioration
rate (19 7 1). A lth o u gh their detailed selection o f
m ight have been to force the popu lation to
rad iocarb on dates has m et w ith criticism (E vett,
‘ch an ge from a nom adic existence to one w here a stable com m u n ity was bu ilt u p ’ , in effect a
1973)5 general trend w hich they expose still seems to be correct. It conflicts absolutely w ith
ch an ge from ‘incipient a g ricu ltu re’ to the more
the synchroneity o f the Elm D ecline. A second difficulty arises if an attem p t is
intensive system in evidence on this site. T h e arch aeological im plications o f this sugges
m ade to set the M esolithic/N eolithic transition
tion are interesting, w hether or not Sim s’s d e
as late as the E lm D ecline. T h e greatest problem
tailed argum ents are accepted. T h e y suggest that
w ith the late M esolithic is sim ply its failure to
the E lm D eclin e does not m ark the b egin n in g o f
m eet
N eolithic clearan ce but m ay correspond m ore
m ajority o f rad iocarb on dates still seem to lie
up
w ith
the
succeeding
period.
The
closely w ith a period o f intensified activity. I f so,
in the fifth m illennium b .c., w ith on ly a sm all
it becom es less o f an archaeological problem , and
n um ber in the earlier fourth m illennium . T his
the pioneerin g phases o f clearan ce must be sought
applies p a rticu la rly in southern E ngland , w here
at an earlier date.
M esolith ic and N eolithic distributions overlap,
T h ere are three reasons for accep tin g this
bu t not, for instance, in western Scotlan d, w here
revision. T h e most serious objection to con
C ly d e C airns and O b a n ia n shell m iddens show
n ecting the first period o f clearance to the E lm
an alm ost com plem en tary distribution. In Ire
D ecline is its ve ry synchroneity. T h is poses two
land
problem s w hich this m odel could not contain.
(W oodm an , 1974b). W h a t a pparen tly happens
It runs counter to the distributional evidence for
in most parts o f B ritain is that the frequency o f
a slow expansion o f settlem ent from lighter, w ell-
dated sites declines, follow ing a classic S-shaped
the
degree
o f overlap
is controversial
MESOLITHIC
0
3500 be
4000b.c.
NEOLITHIC
10
2:1
3000b.c.
C h ro n olog ical distribution o f late M esolithic and early N eolithic rad iocarb on dates from southern E n glan d , plotted at tw o standard deviations.
8
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
cu rve, before an y N eolithic a ctiv ity replaces them
for the presence o f open grassland on the ch alk
(fig. 2 :1 ). T h is suggests three a ltern ative solu
at this tim e, and L im b rey now considers this to
tions : to invoke an independent dem ise o f M eso
be related, not to an initial large-scale clearan ce,
lithic
bu t to a developed stage o f settlem ent after
a ctiv ity ,
for
w hich
there
is no
other
evid en ce; "to assume that this is a fortuitous
earlier a ctiv ity had depleted the soil, w ith the
prod uct o f arch aeological sam pling; or to pos
loss o f part o f its m olluscan fau na (1975, p. 185).
tulate that the pioneering stage o f the N eolithic
T h e extent to w hich the pu b lic m onum ents
began in the earlier fourth m illennium b.c. and
m ay relate to this level o f organisation can be
led to progressive accu lturation.
dem onstrated b y a sim ple exam ple. T h e clearin g
T h ere are good reasons for a ccep tin g this last
at H o ck h am M ere seems to have lasted a b ou t
altern ative. T h e dates at present a va ila b le for
230 rad iocarb on years, w ith an initial d ate o f
extended clearings are very m uch the sam e as
3036 ± 1 1 5 b.c. (Q,— 1048). F ollo w in g the w ork
those for large N eolithic m onum ents. C ase has
o f T a u b e r, Sims has attem p ted to relate the
argued co gen tly that the difficulties o f pioneer
position o f his sam pling site to the pollen c a tc h
agricu ltu re, p a rticu la rly after settlem ent b y sea,
m ent w hich it represents (1973, p. 233). His sm allest estim ate is an area o f 36 sq. km . A ssum
w ould not allow such undertakings until the population had ach ieved a ‘stable ad ju stm ent’ to
ing that this overall episode (or episodes) lasted
its new surroundings, perhaps at a tim e w hen
rou gh ly
hu n tin g was a lrea d y less viab le (1969, cf. Sims,
estim ate
1973s P- 234)- I f this w ere so, Sim s’s suggestion m ight be p a rtly correct, and a clim atic flu ctu a
strippin g this area o f trees, assum ing th at no part
tion,
m akes use o f the felling rate for stone axes
m irrored
to some
extent
in
the
E lm
250 calendar years, it is possible the
m inim um
effort
in volved
to in
w as cleared m ore than once. T h is calcu latio n
D ecline, w ould also correspond w ith the first
provided b y Iversen. T h is suggests
period o f extended farm ing. T h is could accou n t
sm allest w ork-effort requ ired for clearan ce w ould
that the
T A B L E 1: The Neolithic clearance at Hockham Mere Effects on forest
Agricultural indicators
Interpretation
T e m p o ra ry lo ca l red u ctio n
P io n eer settlem en t and w o o d la n d g ra zin g
S econ d te m p o ra ry red u ctio n
A s ab o v e
C le a ra n ce o f m ajor trees
E L M D E C L IN E
Y o u n g trees felled ; o ld er trees rin ge d
Som e colo n isation and scru b
D ry in g o f tim ber
C le a ra n ce o f scru b
B u rn in g o f dried w o od
A p p e a ra n c e o f grasslan d S tart o f re gen eratio n
C e re als and grasslan d
R e g e n era tio n o f elm and ash
S h iftin g a g ric u ltu re w ith w o o d la n d g ra zin g . R e d u c tio n o f n utrients le a d in g to g rea te r g ra zin g . M ix e d farm in g . T w o phases, the second on a g rea te r scale D e p letio n o f soil n utrients A bandonm ent
F u ll se co n d a ry forest M in im u m p ollen ca tc h m e n t c. 36 sq. km. E lm D e clin e to fall o f herb p ollen c. 236 ra d io ca rb o n years. B ased on d a ta from Sim s 1973.
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
9
have been abou t 4,000 m an-hours per annum .
m ent here w hich was partly responsible for the
T his corresponds q u ite closely w ith estim ates o f
extension o f this period back from
the w ork requirem ent for bu ild in g an earthen
third m illennium b.c. It now appears that even
long b arrow (R enfrew , 1973a, p. 547). But it
this date m ay b elong to a developed phase. In no
the later
must be added that Sims him self adm its that
case is the C u m b rian evidence decisive, but it is
his calculations are tentative - and this applies
perhaps significant that five o f the six sites w ith
even more to the present schem e.
possible pioneer clearings are situated near the
T hese argum ents im p ly clearance before the
coast (fig. 2 :2 ).
E lm D ecline, but none o f them prove it. H o w
E vid en ce is not confined to C u m b ria and
ever, there is pollen evidence w hich is quite con
N orthern Irelan d , although these are the areas
sistent w ith this outline. Six sites in C u m b ria
w here pollen analysts have been most active. In
h ave dem onstrated clearan ce before the Elm
East A n glia , D im b leb y and Evans concluded that
D ecline, and w ork in Ireland and elsewhere is
the first forest clearance at Broom e H eath took
givin g sim ilar results. M ost botanists have so far
place abou t 3500 b.c. (in W ain w right, 1972, pp.
treated these episodes as a M esolithic pheno
86 ff.), and recently published w ork on the
m enon, not because o f their p articu lar character,
N orth Yorksh ire M oors raises sim ilar (Spratt and Sim m ons, 1976):
but because o f the dem ands o f the p revailing N eolithic chronology. A . G . Sm ith, how ever, has cast doubts on this procedure, pointing out how the date o f the first clearance at B allyscullion corresponds very closely w ith those from the N eolithic
settlem ent
at
B ally n a gilly
(1975).
W oo d m an has also argued that hunting, w ith or w ith ou t burn ing, was not im portant in the Irish M esolithic (1976). Pennington, w orkin g in C u m b ria , has preferred a M esolithic context for sim ilar episodes, although she specifically noted
issues
A feature o f the period around the Ulmus decline is the conglom eration o f sm all forest recessions ju st prior to that event, so that the decline o f Ulmus its e lf. . . appears as the culm in ation o f a series o f clearances rather than suddenly. Such interference phases m ight represent the end o f M esolithic occupation or m ight eq u ally be due to initial N eolithic incursions.
that the early clearan ce at Blea T a rn was not
O n ce again the nature o f these early episodes is
v e ry d ifferent from a later episode on the same
not apparent, and the authors suggest that they
site: ‘ the N eolith ic effect on the p rim ary ve g e
m ight show some opening o f the upland forest
tation was, though m ore intense, similar in kind to one o f Mesolithic date for which no material
for hunting. T h e y note that the specifically N eolithic clearings on the moors ‘w ere m ore
evidence in artefacts remains’ (1975) (m y italics). Elsew here in the L ak e D istrict there are per haps five other sites dem onstrating clearance
pronounced than those o f M esolithic times, but
before the E lm D ecline. A t Storrs Moss, w here w orked tim ber was recovered in excavation,
easy to characterise these early clearings. N ot
there w ere two such episodes, the later possibly
at B allyscullion m ay have covered a cen tury.
associated w ith
not different in kind’ (m y italics). As this last quotation makes clear, it is not all w ere o f short duration, and the first episode
in
T h ere is little evidence for the use o f fire, except
P ow ell et al., 1971)- A t W illiam son ’s Moss there is greater am b igu ity, since both M esolithic and
at Storrs Moss, w here arable farm ing is also a
N eolithic artefacts are know n near the sam pling
included cereals but these are in evidence from
arable
farm ing
(O ld field
possibility. N one o f these clearings seems to have
site. A t W illiam son ’s M oss and again at B arfield
the Elm D ecline onw ards. Joh n Coles has argued,
T a rn , these m inor episodes w ere follow ed by
on the basis o f m ore recent pioneer agriculture,
clearan ce for cu ltivation at the E lm D ecline
that the earliest interference w ith
(Pennington, 1975, p. 84). A n oth er precocious
w ould have left little or no pollen evidence
clearin g was at Ehenside T a rn (W alker, 1966);
(1976). I f this is true, it m ay be m ore rew ard ing to isolate the arch aeological traces o f this
it was a rad iocarb on date for the N eolithic settle
the forest
io
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
ea rly phase. A p S im o n has alread y suggested an
ever, there is w idespread trad itio n al evid ence
‘E arliest N eo lith ic’ period ending a b ou t 3500 b.c.
that the ecological preferences o f p a rticu la r trees
T h ere need not be any conflict betw een this
and plants are n orm ally w ell understood. J o h n
(1976). As
C oles has recen tly considered the a rch a eo lo g ica l
A . G . S m ith has rem arked, ‘ It m ay be that the
im plications o f pioneer agricu ltu re in C a n a d a
decline in elm is overem phasised both in the
and R ussia (1976). H ere tree types w ere certain ly
pollen d iagram s and in the literatu re’ (1970,
em ployed as a gu id e to local fertility and w in d
p- 9 0 -
falls w ere also used as a m eans o f exam in in g
suggestion and the pollen record
the subsoil. A n o th er clu e to soil conditions was THE C L EARAN CE
OF W O O D L A N D
Evidence from analogy
the ease o f splitting these w indfalls. B ecause o f the tim e required to prep are the grou n d for a gricu ltu re areas w ith n atu ral p lan t foods w ere
The location o f clearings In all pioneerin g a gri
also favoured, a proced u re w h ich w as recom
culture the choice o f clearance site is especially
m ended b y L ord B acon.
cru cial, the m ore so since the farm er m ay have
T h e re h ave been suggestions that ea rly N eo
no exp erience o f the area to gu id e him . H o w
lithic farm ers sp ecifically sought ou t areas w here
0 2 :2
5 km T h e location o f pre-E lm D eclin e clearings in C u m b ria.
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
11
p articu lar trees w ere grow in g. T h is is one ex
and burnt, leavin g the forest floor open to light-
planation o f the events in those parts o f Ireland
lovin g plants. A further alternative was suggested
w here elm was the com m onest tree. M itch ell
in W a lk e r’s study o f N eolith ic a ctiv ity in C u m b ria
(1956)
has suggested that the pioneer settlers in
(1966), that trees m ight m erely h ave been ring-
such areas selected relativ ely pure stands o f elm , p a rtly as a source o f le a f fodder, but p rin cip a lly
barked and the interven ing spaces used until
as a clue to local fertility. T h e one d ifficu lty w ith
years after the b ark was rem oved. T h ere is some
this argum en t is that elm is n otoriously d ifficult
evidence for this type o f procedure from the
to w ork. V e r y m uch the sam e approach m ay
Swiss site o f N ied erw il. T h is was a settlem ent
a p p ly to the later fall o f lim e pollen (T u rner,
provid in g rem arkab le evidence o f w aterlogged
J ., 1962). T h is was at one tim e seen as another
tim ber buildings. O n e curious feature o f the
clim a tically induced phenom enon, bu t now it
site was that the sequence o f houses established in
these had died. T h is m igh t be five to fifteen
appears to result from hum an interference. L im e
excavation did not correspond to the sequence
m ay have been selected as another source o f
o f felling established b y d en drochron ology. T h e
fodder, or indeed o f bast, bu t again its c h ief
excavator, W aterb o lk , argues that some o f the
im portance m ay h ave been as a gu ide to better
trees w ere not a ctu ally felled, bu t w ere ring-
q u a lity soils. T h ere is the further com plication
barked, and then left standing until the tim ber
that both elm and lim e are slow to recover from
was needed (1972). A va rian t o f this a rran ge
interference and do not release pollen again for
m ent is to attack the sm aller trees in itially and
several years.
to fell the larger ones a year or so later.
Selective clearance O n e extension o f this principle
allow ed ligh t-lovin g plants to flourish, the effects
is through forest m anagem ent, the careful m an i
o f grazin g anim als w ould assume increasing im
pulation o f w ood land
In each case, once the initial open in g had
areas to fulfil specific
portance. C a ttle, and p articu la rly pigs, h ave a
tim ber requirem ents. It is d ifficult to use pollen
most destructive effect on w ood land , not on ly b y
analysis to investigate selective interference o f this kind, m ain ly because the intervals betw een
suppressing
regrow th and pollin ation v a ry from one species
observed that in w inter cattle can even strip
to another. T h e regu lar cu llin g o f one p articu lar
elm bark (1975, p. 65). It is possible that b y
tree can lead to its virtu al exclusion from the
carefu lly controlled g ra zin g at the right intensity
pollen record and the over-representation o f others o f far less econom ic im portance (cf.
forest clearings could be m aintained and even extended. C on versely, cattle w ill not attack the
R a ck h a m ,
secon dary
grow th,
but
also
by
atta ck in g the trees them selves. A . G . Sm ith has
high
you n g shoots o f h azel and this m ay be one
Som erset
reason w h y it increases its holding in secondary
Levels does suggest N eolithic and B ron ze A g e
forest. G roen m an -van -W aaterin ge has recently
copp icin g, and preserved w ood show ing ap p ro
argued that controlled grazin g o f this kind can also lead to the creation o f hedges (1972). She points out that a num ber o f characteristic hedge
1976, p. 82). E ven so, the
proportion o f hazel
pollen
in
the
priate grow th patterns has now been excavated (Coles, J . and O rm e, 1976; cf. T u rn er, J ., 1965, p. 3 5 1). P ollard in g w ou ld also have been em
plants are a lread y recorded as pollen or ch arcoal
ployed in later prehistory to supply the m any
in British N eolithic contexts. O n a rather sim ilar
oak tim bers used in defensive and dom estic architecture.
principle, P ollard has used the species com
O th e r
forms
o f selective
interference
are
position o f some m odern hedges to suggest their origins in m edieval w ood land (1973).
eq u ally hard to confirm on the basis o f ph ysical evidence. O n e a ltern ative to the total strippin g
Complete clearance F ull clearan ce proceeds in tw o
o f tree cover is the d eliberate rem oval o f the
w a y s : b y felling or b y fire setting. T h e actu al
upper can opy, retain in g on ly the trunks. T h e cu t m aterial can then be spread on the ground
choice o f m ethod w ill p ro b ab ly be governed b y both the size and the hardness o f the tim ber.
12
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
T h ere is now a va lu a b le b od y o f exp erim ental
stages until
w ork on the problem s o f felling and from this it w ould ap p ear that stone axes can be alm ost as
( 1957) * F ellin g m ight have taken place in early sum m er, w hen the sap was no lon ger rising and
efficient as m etal tools. T h e best-know n exp eri
when there was tim e for the w ood to d ry. In
m ent (Iversen, 1956) suggested th at one a rch a e
R ussia b ark was stripped from felled trees to
the
groun d
was
fu lly
prep ared
ologist could clear a b ou t a hectare o f forest in
hasten this process (Coles, J ., 1976). Slow fires
five weeks. In eigh teen th -cen tu ry C a n a d a the
w ere essential and needed carefu l m anagem ent.
felling rate using a steel axe w as ro u gh ly d ou b le
O n e techn ique w as the rollin g o f logs. N ot all
this figure, b u t in m odern B razil clearan ce w ith
tim ber
m etal tools is at a rate o f a b ou t one h ectare a
exam ple, p rovid in g m ore ash than oth er trees
was
eq u a lly
prod u ctive,
alder,
for
m onth (Coles, J ., 1973, pp. 20 ff.). T h e re are
(Coles, J ., 1976). In som e cases felled tim ber was
m an y im pon derables, such as the precise w a y in
a ctu a lly im ported to be b u rn t, and E styn E vans
w hich d ifferen t tools w ere used, and the tim e
has pointed out how u p to 4 hectares o f w ood lan d
needed to fell trees o f different sizes. S tartin
could be b u rn t to nourish the soil in a tenth
( 1976)
7
o f this area (1975, p. 3). In a n y cycle o f shifting
m inutes for fellin g a tree 15 cm across to 90
gives
estim ates
w hich
ran ge
from
exp loitation firebreaks m ight also be needed to
m inutes for one 60 cm across. E vid en ce from
protect the secon dary cover in ad join in g plots
preserved tim bers shows v e ry clearly that felling
(cf. C on klin , 1957). T h e re w ou ld also be a need
n orm ally depen ded not on b ru te force b u t on
for
sp lin tering
secon d ary forest, though rath er easier, w ould
o ff
chips
around
the
trunk
to
create a ‘sharpened p en cil’ outline. T o o l m arks
fencing.
The
even tu al
clearan ce
o f the
h ave follow ed sim ilar lines.
on felled tim bers found in the Som erset L evels suggest the use o f an axe rath er than chisels and
w edges, alth ou gh
w ooden
w edges
w ere
alm ost certain ly used in cleav in g planks (Coles,
Artefact evidence T h e arch aeological evid ence is lim ited b u t cer
J ., H ib b ert and O rm e, 1973). F ire setting w ould
tain ly conform s to this schem e. T h e re is above
n orm ally be reserved for the larger or m ore
all a large corpus o f artefacts, co n v en tio n ally
resistant trees. S tartin suggests that those o f m ore than 60 cm d iam eter w ou ld on ly be cu t dow n is consistent w ith the p ractice in Som erset, w here
associated w ith clearan ce, and span nin g a period o f perhaps 2,000 years. For all its ab u n d an ce, this m aterial is little understood. T h e ch ro n ology o f flint and stone axes is on ly d ocu m en ted in
the larger trees w ere used. C arefu lly m anaged,
p a rt; their overall distribution has never been
to su p p ly b u ild in g m aterial (1976, p. 11). T h is
fire setting need not be labour-intensive and
c o m p ile d ; and there are even difficulties in u n d er
S haw has described an instance in W est A frica w here a tree 44 m high was d espatched in six
stan din g their use. T h e re can be little d o u b t that m an y o f the tools n orm ally described as
hours (1969). B urn t tree stum ps are on record
axes
from Storrs M oss in the N eolithic and T h o rn e
evident sim ilarity o f form . Som e o f these ‘axes’
had
very
varied
functions,
despite
an
W aste in the L a te B ronze A g e (P ow ell et al.,
are far too sm all to have been used d irectly
19 7 1; B u ck lan d , 1976).
in forestry and m ay h ave served as chisels or
In either case a large am ou n t o f debris w ould
leath erw orkin g tools. O th ers again are too large
then need to be b u rn t, not on ly to clear the
to h ave been used at all. In som e cases their
groun d b u t also to eradicate weeds. A n d for
v ery q u a lity gives them a w a y ; the ja d e axes
clearan ce
im ported into B ritain in the N eolith ic are one
to be
fu lly
effective
it
m igh t
be
necessary to rem ove the boles o f dead trees, alth ou gh these w ou ld even tu a lly rot in the
exam ple
groun d . B u rn in g w ou ld need to be thorough,
1929, p. 113 ). T h e sym bolic aspects o f the larger item s h ave been considered b y Sh erratt
and carefu lly controlled. C o n k lin ’s observations show that it could be undertaken in several
(C am p b e ll S m ith,
1963), the ch alk
‘axes’ from W oo d h en g e anoth er (C u n n in gton ,
(1976) and T y le r has shown that the w eights o f
.4 Pure Soil flint axes can fall into three distinct groups (1976)T h ere are p ro b ab ly four functions to be dis
Clearance and Colonisation
13
w ith L ate B ronze A ge axes). It was not until the Iron A g e that a suitable replacem en t for the h eavy stone tool was found. In this period
tinguished : axes s trieto sensu, adzes, stone wedges,
also the m odern type o f saw was developed.
and hoes or m attocks for use in cu ltivation .
Iron
A lth o u gh
some
tim e (cf. M an n in g, 1970).
separating
the
progress
can
be
m ade
in
hoes w ere
another
inn ovation
at
that
m orphological
It is on ly in the N eolithic that these items
grounds, the others are better distinguished b y
show really clear spatial patterns. W h a tev er the
analysis
precise functions o f ‘axes’ as a class,
of
first
two
ed ge-w ear
on
patterns.
Sonnenfeld
some
(1963) has done experim ental w ork on hoes, but
relationship w ith clearan ce and cu ltivation is
this approach has yet to be extended to British
inescapable. B ut there is a problem , in that their
m aterial. S tartin has shown evidence that stone
num bers on the ground can not be treated as any
wedges m ight w ell have been perforated towards
index o f the intensity o f clearance. In C u m b ria,
the b utt. A
w here the chronology o f L an g d a le axes offers
co m p aratively slight shaft could the w ed ge in
some control, there is an inverse relationship
place from a position o f safety (1976, p. 9). T h is
betw een the intensity o f activity, as m easured
interpretation could w ell be applied to E uropean
by
shoe-last adzes and to some o f the British axe
N eolithic axes in the field (B radley, 1972). These
then have been used to hold
pollen
analysis,
and
the
distribution
of
ham m ers, both o f w hich have been claim ed,
are most frequent in the areas w ith less d u rab le
am ongst other things, as agricu ltu ral tools (cf.
or extensive clearance. In W essex and the Cots-
Fow ler, 19 7 1; B rad ley, 1972). O n e site w here
w olds, the same relationship exists betw een the
this could a p p ly is Barm s ton in Y orkshire, w here
areas w ith pu b lic m onum ents, w hich m ay have
V a r le y found a q u an tity o f felled and ap p aren tly
been constructed in grassland, and the m ain
shaped tim ber associated w ith three o f these
d istribution o f axe finds (cf. T y le r, 1976). In
tools (1968). A p a rt from edge-w ear analysis,
each case this distribution
w ork is in progress on the extan t rem ains o f
repeated bu t lim ited onslaughts on forest or
felled tim bers, and the evidence from Som erset
cu ltivated land, and few er finds are m ade w here
is a
m easure o f
and
the ground rem ained open for longer. S im ilarly,
w ooden w edges early in the N eolithic (Coles, J .,
in the early B ronze A g e axe ham m ers are absent
certain ly shows the use o f axes,
adzes
H ib b ert and O rm e, 1973). T h e few British ‘axe-
in those parts o f C u m b ria w ith pollen evidence
heads’ w ith hafts have now been review ed by Savory, but on ly in terms o f pan oram ic cu ltu ral diffusion (19 7 1).
for grassland (B radley, 1972).
Chronological trends
T h e chron ology o f stone axes is still un certain, and there is conflict betw een the evidence from
T h ere are some chronological trends w ith in this
the prod uction sites and the few discoveries o f these tools in B ronze A g e contexts. In deed, on M id d le B ronze A g e sites they have been dis
evidence. T hese relate to the location o f clear ings, the techniques o f felling and the econom ic possibilities o f pioneer agriculture.
missed as rubbish survivals (e.g. Stone, 1941, p.
O n e w a y o f view in g the grad u al retreat o f the
136). In fact, there are dates as late as the
forest is to com pare the ratios o f arb oreal and
fourteenth cen tu ry b.c. for antler picks from flint
n on-arboreal pollen betw een a series o f sites, but
mines and the tw elfth cen tu ry b.c. for the pro
the use o f this m ethod for d atin g does o f course
duction o f other axes. It was on ly in the L ate
presuppose a fairly sim ple and uniform process
B ronze A g e that a full range o f w ood w o rkin g
o f clearance. O n e area w here it has been em
tools was developed , and it is dou b tfu l w hether
ployed w ith some success is the N ew Forest,
bronze im plem ents played m uch part in p rim ary
w here D im b leb y has suggested the relative se q u ence o f a num ber o f barrow s and other earth
clearan ce (but see G od w in and C liffo rd , 1938, p. 394, for w aterlogged oak and pine trees felled
works (1954). It is possible to m ake a d ifferent
14
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
use o f this same principle. F igu re 2 :3 sum m arises this ratio for all the reliab ly dated clearan ce phases in E n glan d , Scotlan d and W ales. T h e basic sam ple is that used b y G o d w in (1975), w ith
3000 ■
some subsequent additions. O n ly clearings w ith rad iocarb on dates or d irect arch aeological as sociations have been used. T o ensure co m p a ra
2800
b ility soil-pollen analyses are not inclu d ed . T h is ratio is plotted on a 400-year m oving average, om ittin g the later N eolith ic w here too little d ata is a va ila b le for calcu lation s o f this kind. T h e
2400
resulting d iag ra m m erely sum m arises the local en viron m ent o f these p articu lar clearan ce hori zons. For this reason it m ay be regarded as some reflection o f the processes described above. Settin g aside the later N eolithic w here there is not enough evidence, there seem to be
2000
two
general cycles tow ards open cou n try, one b eg in ning in the earlier N eolith ic and possibly ga in in g m om entum on ly b y the second m illennium b .c .; and a second, m ore rap id cycle, b egin n in g w ith the first m illenn ium . T h ere are tw o w ays o f
Q 1600
.Q
NON-ARBOREAL POLLEN
ARBOREAL POLLEN
vie w in g this p a tte r n : either as a prolon ged cycle o f clearan ce, regeneration and renew ed cle ar ance, or as a series o f successive onslaughts on the lan d scap e o f different areas. T h e second
1200
in terpretation seems m ore ap p rop riate, and on this basis the h igh er ratios o f arb oreal pollen m ight d enote those phases in w hich clearan ce w as d irected into m ore w ooded areas, in clu d in g
800
p rim ary forest. C on versely, low er ratios m ight represent a ctiv ity in those zones w h ich
had
alrea d y b een stron gly affected. W h a t this d iagram im plies is that the cycle o f forest cle ar ance discussed so far is one w hich was not
400
specific to a single period or to a single eco nom ic regim e. M u c h o f the discussion o f N eolithic pioneer agricu ltu re m ight a p p ly to the L ate Bronze A g e too. It is possible that other changes in the nature
0
o f forest clearan ce can be recognised from m ore
0
20
40
%
60
80
100
con ven tion al sources. O n e such ch an ge m ay in fact span the con ven tion al N eolithic/B ronze A g e division. It is perhaps first seen in the massive tim ber constructions o f the southern English henges, w h ich necessitated the shapin g o f oak uprights up to a m etre in d iam eter. T h ose at D u rrin g ton W alls w ere alm ost certain ly b rou ght
2 :3
T h e percentages o f arb oreal and nonarb oreal pollen in d ated clearan ce horizons, plotted on a 400-year m ovin g average. D ates w ere o rigin ally plotted at tw o standard deviations.
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation to the site from a llu vial or G recnsand deposits
lim ited
some distance aw ay, and yet the artefacts from
extent o f clearance m ay have perm itted corre
the excavation
sponding changes in the econom y. B u rn ing is not ju st a means o f clearin g a w ay
w ood w orking
included tools
on ly
seven
(W ain w righ t
and
possible L ong-
and
for this
reason
changes
in
15 the
w orth, 1971, p. 222). T h is is in com plete con trast w ith the n um ber o f antler picks abandoned
debris. In an eq u ilib riu m ecosystem there is a
after d iggin g the ditch. T h e im plication must
be passed to the consum er, w hile the rem ain ing
be that m uch o f the p relim inary shaping w ork
90 per cent has to be recycled through the litter
was carried out at the felling site, a reasonable
food chain. In a w ooded environm ent m uch o f
enough procedure considering the w eight o f w ood to be m oved. But this does not explain
the biom ass is concentrated above the ground in trunks, branches and foliage, w ith a finite
the rarity o f sm aller tools at the site itself, and
hum us com ponent in the subsoil. B u rn in g can
lim it o f abou t 1 o per cent to the energy w h ich can
it is possible that the detailed carp en try was
release these m ineral nutrients, but they are dis
carried out w ith m etal im plem ents, rew orked
persed once a few crops have been taken (cf. W elin d er, 1975, pp. 28 ff.). I f the b u rn in g is
w hen they w ere blunted or broken. T h is problem becom es acute w ith M usson ’s reconstruction o f
too rapid, or if dense surface cover generates too
the circles as roofed buildings (in W a in w righ t and L on gw orth , 1971, pp. 363 ff.). A bronze axe
m uch heat, these advantages are put at risk,
has in fact been found in an eq u ivalen t con
advantages o f bu rn ing are relatively short-lived
text at the M o u n t Pleasant henge (W ain w righ t, 1970). T h is d ifficu lty m ay be solved b y Burgess’s
and crop yields soon start to fall, this can be
ch ro n ology for the period (1976a).
nutrients acquired by b u rn in g are gra d u ally lost,
and iron-rich soils can be harm ed. A lth o u gh the
partly due to com petition from weeds. As the
T h e m ajor transition m ay be a little later,
a len gth y period o f fallow in g becom es necessary,
and should perhaps appear w ith the adoption
but if b u rn in g is resum ed at the scrub stage
o f axe ham m ers early in the second m illen nium b.c. I f any o f these w ere used in felling
this w ill be less prod u ctive and the soil itself
there could have been a grad u al ch an ge from
out, a shortening o f the fallow period can m ean
m ay need m ore attention. As Boserup has pointed
N eolithic techniques o f clearance to the use o f the
an increase in in d ivid u al w ork effort (1965). T o
beetle and w edge. It is quite possible that in the second m illennium b.c. clearance m ay have been
some extent this m ay be m irrored b y the use o f
directed tow ards soils w hich could support m ore substantial trees and, if so, the assem bling o f tim ber for the great henge m onum ents m ight be
observed that the plough can only be used in
only
that a num ber o f d u go u t canoes are o f the
often short-lived, this restriction w ould m ean that the plough m ight on ly be used on soils w hich had alread y proved them selves m ore than usually resilient. It m ay have been the conscious application o f m anure to these areas w hich did
same period, some o f them m ade from trunks up to i-6 m in diam eter and 15 m in length
several regions o f N eolithic Britain.
the start o f a
process.
In
the
earlier
Bronze A g e tree trunks over a m etre in d ia m eter w ere ad ap ted as coffins (Ashbee, i960, p. 86), and recent rad iocarb on dates also reveal
m ore elaborate agricu ltu ral tools, but Coles has forest agricu ltu re after the tree stum ps have rotted
(1976). Because pioneer clearings are
most to sustain the extensive clearings know n in
(M cG ra il and Sw itsur, 1975). O th e r hollow ed
T h ere are also lim itations on stock raising in
tree trunks m ay have been used as cooking
a forested environm ent. In an interesting study o f
troughs (Sayce, 1945). In the L a te Bronze A g e
this problem , A n d rew Flem ing argues that there
there is a sim ilar relationship betw een the second
was little scope for the em ergence o f pastoral-
cycle o f forest clearan ce and the b u ild in g o f hill forts.
ism until a grassland landscape had developed
In each o f the m ajor onslaughts on the forest,
from sm all clearings and that from the larger
the ran ge o f econom ic options w ill have been
open areas. In the sm aller forest clearings it
(1972a). H e distinguishes betw een the evidence
16
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
would be possible to obtain enough le a f fodder
accou n t for the ard m arks beneath S outh Street
to support a herd o f anim als, b u t this w ou ld be a considerable bu rd en . ‘I f 20 or 30 . . . cattle
lon g b arrow (1972, p. 364), b u t it m igh t also exp lain the eq u a lly short-lived cu ltivation w hich
required a square kilom etre o f forest b row sing
preceded the b u ild in g o f W a y la n d ’s S m ith y. In
d u rin g the sum m er, and the best part o f an
the L a te B ronze A g e, the presence o f w ood lan d
other for their w inter keep, dom estic anim als at
snails in the lynchets at R am s H ill invites a
this stage could never have been m ore than a
sim ilar conclusion, and here again it w as shown
sup plem en tary source o f foo d .’ In the case o f
that cu ltivation w as succeeded
the larger open areas, he offers a series o f altern a
(E vans in B ra d ley and Ellison, 1975, p. 143). O n ce established, these conditions lasted a m il lennium .
tive estim ates, d ra w n from eth n ograp h ic evi dence, for the relationship betw een p opu lation
by
grassland
and the total extent o f clearance. H is figures
T h e re is a considerable differen ce betw een
show that if h a lf the lan d w ere in fact used for cattle - and this w ou ld be essential if the soil
w ood lan d and grassland conditions. G rassland has m ore hum us per unit area than w ood lan d ,
w ere to rem ain p rod u ctive - no one w ould be able
and for this reason p rop erly m ain tained grass
to keep m ore than abou t five anim als. O n ce
land has a greater poten tial under cu ltivation .
again a pastoral econ om y is seen to be rath er im p ro b ab le until w ood lan d had given w a y to
W elin d er has suggested that lan d used for g ro w
grassland.
ing crops m ay feed ten tim es as m an y people as it w ou ld w hen used as pasture (19 75). T h e re seems little d o u b t that a ltern ate h u sb and ry, the
THE CLEARANCE
OF G R A S S L A N D
a ltern ation o f cro p p in g and gra zin g , is u su ally m ore p rod u ctive than the m a in ten an ce o f p e rm a
T h e re seem to be tw o possible routes to the
nent pasture. T h e d ifficu lty is in cle arin g areas
creatio n o f open grassland. T h e first is evid en t
o f grassland once they h ad b ecom e established.
from som e o f the earlier exam ples. In these
G rass roots are resistant to o rd in a ry bu rn in g,
cases grassland cam e into b ein g less because it
and therefore Boserup argues that a p lou gh w ou ld
w as sp ecifically requ ired than as a consequence
be needed to clear grassland fallow (1965). T h is
o f m oun tin g pressure on w ood lan d . O n ce the p rim ary cover had been disturbed, the pioneer
m a y be a p p rop riate to m odern conditions but, as E styn E vans points out, there are grazed
farm ers initiated a cycle o f dim inishin g returns, in w h ich lan d that ou gh t to h ave reverted to forest was cleared at decreasin g intervals as crop
sw ards in Irelan d w h ich even to d a y are too
yields fell. U ltim a tely , all that m ight have been
tough for the plou gh (1975). T h is is a serious objection, since p ractical exp erim en t has shown
needed was the regu lar b u rn in g o f scrub. T h is
th at an ard w ou ld not be eq u al to the task o f clearan ce, p a rticu la rly i f it lacked an iron tip.
p roced ure could be consistent w ith popu lation
T h erefo re,
pressure, and each red u ction o f the fallow period
m igh t be o p e n : to retain the grassland as pasture
w ould in volve an increase in w ork effort w hich
w ith ou t a ttem p tin g cu ltiva tio n ; or to b reak it
was not com p letely offset b y an increase in p ro
b y hand p rep ara to ry to a fresh phase o f p lo u g h
tw o a ltern ative
courses
o f action
d uction. T o this extent the creation o f open
ing. T h is runs counter to E styn E va n s’s ow n
grassland m ight be fortuitous, even unw elcom e.
view that in the N eolithic the ard m ight h ave
T h e second ap p ro a ch w as perhaps m ore care
been used to break the soil before h an d -rid gin g.
fu lly calcu late d . H ere J o h n E vans has suggested
T h e re is some evid ence for the treatm en t o f
that the ard m ight h ave been used to b reak up the
grassland before iron was a va ila b le for ards and
surface in order to create pasture. T h is is an in
m attocks. S pad e irons are a R o m a n in n ovatio n
teresting reversal o f B oserup’s argu m en t, that
(M a n n in g , 1970). T w o N eolith ic sites are in structive. A t W in d m ill H ill it appears that the
the p lough can be ad opted as the one m eans o f con tin u in g cu ltiva tio n under grassland fallow . It is a vie w that D r E vans first put forw ard to
tu rf had been stripped from the site before the enclosure b an k was built, an illo gical proced u re
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
17
unless it was intended to release the subsoil for
from the waste, the tu rf being pared o ff the
tillage. T his layer showed signs o f possible dis turban ce (D im b leb y in I. F. Sm ith, 1965, pp. 34
surface as a necessary prelude to cu ltiva tio n ’ (1936). A rather sim ilar m ethod was adopted in
ff.). L ate r w ork on the associated snails supports
D u tch ‘ C eltic fields’ (Brongers, 1976, pp. 60 f f ) .
these observations, and D im b leb y has suggested that this was an early instance o f parin g and
F u rther evidence comes from B ronze A g e sites. A n um ber o f barrow s, some in m argin al areas,
b urn in g (cf. D im b leb y and E vans, 1974). T his
w ere origin ally b u ilt over furrows, possibly a
consists o f stripp in g o ff the sods, allow in g them to
result o f strippin g o ff the surface in this w ay.
d ry and then b urn in g them to nourish the soil (cf.
T hese barrow s include L atch Farm in H a m p
G a ile y and Fenton, 1970). T h ere m ay also be some
shire, Sim ondston C airn in South W ales and
an a logy w ith D alladies, w here 0-75 hectares o f
W in d H ill in L an cashire (P iggott, C ., 1938, fig. 2;
tu rfw e re c u tfo ru se in the long b arro w (Piggott, S. 1972a). T h e total effort required for this o p era
F ox, C ., 1959, fig. 50b; T yson , 1972; see fig.
tion was estim ated to be 5,750 m an-hours, the
d raw n sections bu t w ere not identified in e x c a v a
2 :4 ). O n these sites the furrows appear in the
eq u ivalen t on other sites o f d iggin g a q u arry
tion. A t A scot in Berkshire the furrows under a
ditch. T h e excavator com m ented that this was
bell barrow w ere associated w ith scattered ch a r
an extrem ely wasteful procedure, since the w hole o f this area had been ‘rendered useless for plough
coal and a peak o f cereal pollen (B radley and K eith -L u cas, 1975). T h ere was some sim ilarity
or pasture’ . Som e o f this m aterial certain ly in
betw een the size o f turves used in this b arrow
corp orated oak ch arcoal, but P ig g o tt’s reference
and the w id th o f the excavated furrows.
to layers o f ‘burn t tu r f calls to m ind D im b le b y ’s
T h e tool used in tu rf stripping m ay not alw ays
earlier suggestion, alth ou gh it m ay be that the
have been the sam e. In some cases a stone or
sods w ere stripped to such a depth that too little
bronze axe, m ounted as a m attock, m ight have
soil was left. T h ere m ay be some an alogy w ith
been sufficient, and there is certain ly evidence
C ra w fo rd ’s description o f traditional tu rf w a lls :
that both w ere used in d iggin g chalk in this
‘T hese w ere once com m on in the . . . south o f
period. A n th o n y H a rd in g has now suggested that
E n glan d w here they w ere erected round intakes
some bronze ‘axes’ w ere agricu ltu ral tools (1976).
(a)
(b) (c)
(d)
0 2 :4
4m
Profiles o f buried soils show ing possible furrow s: (a) A scot (B radley and K eith -L u cas, 1975); (b) L atch F arm (Piggott, C ., 1938); (c) W in d H ill (Tyson, 1972); (d) Sim ondston C a irn (Fox, C ., 1959).
18
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
O therw ise, a w ooden spade w ou ld h ave been
eroded or d eep ly disturbed before q u an tities o f
p erfectly ad equ ate and there is evidence for these
boulders are released (F lem ing,
in the B ronze A g e at G w ith ia n and S kaill and in
applies as m uch to erosion through o ver-g razin g
the Iron
as it does to cereal a gricu ltu re, and field cle ar
Age
at
D an eb u ry
D u n a in (T h om as, C .,
and
R u d h ’ an
1970; Shep herd , 1976;
19 7 1a ). T h is
ance tod ay is as ch aracteristic o f pasture as it is
B. C u n liffe, pers. co m .; Scott, L ., 1934, p. 221).
o f arable land. T h e re are frequent references to
O th e r tools trad itio n ally used in p arin g and
ch arcoal
b u rn in g includ e flayin g spades, foot ploughs and
w h ether the function o f these in d ivid u a l m on u
breast ploughs, and the irreg u larity o f the A scot
m ents is understood or not. In these cases, it is
furrows could im p ly that a different im plem ent
n oticeable that h azel is alm ost alw ays present and is often the on ly species identified. H a zel
was used there.
layers
u n dern eath
u pland
cairns,
I f the changes in w ood lan d clearan ce d u rin g
will resist clearan ce b y fire and n orm ally re
the E a rly B ron ze A g e m ark one transition, this
generates rap id ly. It is shunned b y gra zin g cattle
onslaught upon open grassland m ust m ark an
and a n um ber o f w riters have noticed how it
e q u a lly significan t threshold. T h e two changes
can
m ay be related to one anoth er and it is possible that as the lan d cleared rath er earlier was in
(Sm ith, A . G ., 1970). T h e b u rn t layers under these cairns m ay possibly show that forest after
va d ed b y grassland, fresh areas o f forest m ay h a ve
m odification.
increase its density
in
secon d ary
forest
been b ro u g h t into use. F lem in g has in fact sug
T h e m ain evidence for stone clearan ce com es
gested that m obile pastoralists could have d riven
from cairnfields, and is rath er am biguous since
farm ers o ff the best lan d. A n d ju st as renew ed
so m an y o f these sites w ere used for bu rial. For
forest clearan ce provided a v a lu a b le source o f
the N eolith ic period, A tkin son has com m en ted
raw m aterial, the second m illennium b .c. also sees
on field clearan ce as one m echanism b y w h ich
greater use o f turf. T h is rem ained the case until
m aterials for stone m onum ents w ere accu m u lated
the ad option o f m ore d u rab le a gricu ltu ral im
(1965, p. 127), and there seems no reason w h y
plem ents in the later B ronze A g e. B y this tim e
the processes o f land clearan ce and b u rial should
too there is evid ence for fresh inroads into the
h ave been a n y m ore exclusive in the B ronze
prim ary forest.
A g e. It is a m oot point w hether burials w ere a ttracted into an area w here cairns a lrea d y existed, or w heth er the ad option o f one p a r ticu lar place as a cem etery offered a m eans o f disposing o f field stones; bu t in the E a rly B ron ze
STONE C L E A R A N C E
So far, the evid ence has m ostly applied to lo w
A g e there is som etim es evid ence for the p la cin g
lan d areas o f B ritain and to those w ith light, fertile soils. For this reason, the m ajor em phasis
o f fu n erary m onum ents in situations w h ere any other use was im possible. For exam ple, G ra h a m
has been p laced on N eolith ic a ctivity. Stone
has noted the siting o f cairns on bosses o f rock
clearan ce usually b ecam e a problem w ith the
that could not be farm ed (1956). O n other sites
expansion o f settlem ent from its N eolith ic o u t
large n atu ral rocks, w hich w ere perhaps too
lines.
h ea v y to m ove, w ere in corpo rated into stone-
Stone cleara n ce has alrea d y attracted an ex
b u ilt m onum ents. A m o n g the exam ples given by
tensive, i f incon clusive, literatu re, m ost o f w h ich
L yn ch are a n um ber o f rin g cairns (19 7 5a ),
concerns the n ature o f cairns. For this reason,
w hilst there is also a w idespread tend en cy for
o n ly a short review o f the p rin cipal points is
stone heaps to d evelop aroun d one or m ore
needed. O n e com m en t must be m ade at the outset. N o rm a lly, stone clearan ce is not a feature
ship betw een cem eteries and clearan ce plots is
o f the first m an-m ade lan dscape and m ay not be associated w ith prep aration for crops. A n orm al
eq u a lly p rob lem atic, and J o b e y has com m en ted on the association o f cairnfields w ith hill forts
requirem en t is for the n atu ral forest soil to be
in northern E n glan d (1965, p. 54).
earthfast boulders. In later periods the relatio n
A Pure Soil - Clearance and Colonisation
19
T h e re is some evidence for the w a y in w hich
certain ly need this treatm ent, as Stukeley w it
these cairns w ere accu m u lated . In a pioneering
nessed at A v eb u ry in the eighteenth cen tury
study o f Scottish cairnfields, G rah a m com m ented on the ch an gin g density o f surface boulders and
(Sm ith, I. F., 1965, p. 180). T his practice m ay explain a layer o f burn t fragm ents in the Bronze
suggested that clearan ce proceeded outw ards
A g e ditch at R am s H ill (B radley and Ellison,
from a cen tral point (1956). T h is is consistent
! 975> PP- 35 an d 5°)» an d a^so use ° f burnt sarsens in field w alls at O v erto n D ow n (Bowen, H . C . and Fow ler, 1961, p. 105).
w ith F ea ch em ’s view that sm all cairns often lie in rough alignm ents, or along slight banks w hich could m ark the edges o f plots (1973). T h is does
T h e evidence from walls and sim ilar bou n
not a p p ly on every site, how ever, and cairns
daries is less open to confusion, despite the w ide
could alw ays d evelop inside fields, provided
range o f possible techniques. T h e structure o f
cu ltivation was carried out by hand. T h e cle ar
such features can give clues to the progress o f
ance o f plots tow ards their edges resem bles the
clearance. C raw ford took the view that early
accu m u latio n o f field w alls. Som e insight into
w alls w ould be based on a series o f ‘grou n d ers’,
this process is given b y a settlem ent at Bliss-
large rocks w hich w ould need m oving before
m oor in D evon w here the clearan ce o f one en
thorough clearance could proceed (1936). H e
closure was never com pleted (Fox, A .,
1954,
argued that the superstructure o f these w alls
fig- 3)T h e intensity o f a ctiv ity can be qu ite im
w ould tend to use sm aller boulders, and applied
pressive. In one study o f cairnfields Scott-E lliott
early clearance in part o f C orn w all. T h is general
noted that clearan ce heaps w ere n orm ally spaced
outline certain ly has its attractions, but another
at abou t 12 m intervals, alth ou gh this could fall to as little as 6 m (1967). In part o f W ales,
sequence o f events is eq u ally likely, and neither must be given an y overall application. In this
this argu m en t him self in d ed u cin g the extent o f
H em p also showed that the large bu rial cairns
second sequence, the structure o f linear banks
fell into distinct size groups (quoted in Bow en,
betrays the difficulties o f m ain tainin g cu ltivation
E. and G resham , 1967, p. 75). T h e larger systems have been described b y F eachem and
B eaghm ore in the N eolithic and at both Sw ine
m ay cover m ore than 40 hectares (1973). O n e
S ty and A ch n acree Moss in the Bronze A ge,
as upland soils w ere progressively depleted. A t
o f the most extensive cairnfields was at C h atton
the low er m aterial o f a bou n d ary was com posed
San dyford in N orthu m berland . H ere J o b e y o b
o f soil and sm all stones, and as erosion bared
served plough marks against the edge o f one
larger rocks these w ere incorporated in the upper layers (Pilcher, 1969; M ach in , 19 7 1; B arrett, H ill and Stevenson, 1976). A t A ch n acree M oss
cairn and a characteristic layer o f ch arcoal on the surface beneath it (1968). H e also noticed plough dam age on stones protru d ing from a pit sealed b y the m onum ent. Interestingly, clearance cairns are still b eing b u ilt on agricu ltu ral land in this area. T h ere is little evidence o f how large stones
the b ou n d ary banks w ere associated w ith shallow ditches cut through the u n derlying podsol, and the excavators suggested that this was done to im prove the local d rain age and to brin g degraded land back into use. Such an approach m ight have
w ere cleared, w here they could not be incor
been com bined w ith b u rn ing to control the q u ality
porated in cairns. T h ere have been few claim s
o f the browse. T h ere m ay be some an alogy b e
for ‘stone holes’ in the literature, and it is not
tw een the basic structure o f these boundaries
alw ays clear how far surface rocks w ill bed
and the sequence from tu rf to stone seen in so
them selves in the ground to a d etectable extent.
m any round barrow s.
A t C erre g Sam son, how ever, a large hole un der
O n e exam ple m ay clarify this last point. In
neath a portal dolm en m ay have been m ade in
1937 Sir C yril Fox excavated two n eighbouring
rem ovin g the capstone from its origin al position
round barrow s in south W ales, Pond C airn and
(L yn ch , 1975b). In some cases fire w ould be used to b reak up large surface stones. Sarsens
Sim ondston C airn (1959, pp. 78 ff. and 105 ff.). Both belonged to the E arly Bronze A g e and on
20
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
p ottery evidence F ox concluded that Sim ondston
rath er the sam e, the responses had to be different.
C airn was p ro b ab ly the earlier. T h e stones in
In areas w here stone clearan ce was im p ortan t there is m uch to com m end F ea ch em ’s generalisa
each cairn w ere taken from separate sources w ithin a sm all area. T h e re was va ry in g evidence
tion that agricu ltu re was sign ifican tly cu rtailed
for cereal a gricu ltu re on the tw o sites. T h e earlier
b y en viron m ental decline in the later B ron ze
barrow o v erla y a series o f furrows, p ro b ab ly
Age (i973)-
produced w ith a spade. A lth o u gh they w ere not recognised in excavation , they are clearly shown in the section d raw in g, and represent a v e ry
COLONISATION
shallow treatm en t o f the soil before the cairn
T h ese processes o f clearan ce h ave shown tw o
was built. T h e y did not affect the n atu ral b e d
ve ry clear tendencies. O n e is tow ards m ore d e
rock and som e o f the stones em ployed in this
m an d in g land use and m ay be a sign o f p o p u
phase w ere d efinitely q u arried. T h e re was no
lation pressure; w hile the second is tow ards
physical evidence for cu ltivation under the later
gra d u al en viron m ental d ecline, w h ich dislocates
site and the m ain m ound was o f tu rf construction. A cairn rin g was added to this core and the fact
the settlem ent pattern . T h ere is d irect a rch a eo
that it was b u ilt en tirely o f surface stones suggests
logical evid ence for an increase in the area o f the settled lan dscape, and for thresholds b eyon d
that the surrounding area was now m ore in ten
w hich certain zones w ou ld fall from use or w ou ld
sively used. C ereals w ere recognised in a pit o f
on ly perm it exp lo itatio n o f a d ifferen t kind.
this phase and it is tem ptin g to suggest that the
D espite this varied b ack grou n d , these changes
stones w ere collected in the fields.
could be a ccom m od ated in ju st tw o w a ys: b y
Fairhurst and T a y lo r have argued that the ch an gin g intensity o f agricu ltu re m ay be reflected b y differen t m ethods o f stone clearan ce (19 7 1). A t K ilp h e d ir they showed that the first Iron
the expansion o f existing settlem ents or b y the creation o f new ones. T h ese questions have been review ed
in a
theoretical study b y H udson (1969). H e suggests
A g e occu p ation had been associated w ith cle a r
that the form ation o f a settlem ent pattern m ight
ance cairns and p ro b ab ly w ith the use o f hand
go through three successive stages. T h e first w ou ld
tools like the spade and the hoe. A fter an interval, a second o ccu p ation follow ed, d u rin g w h ich the most p rod u ctive land was d ivided up by a series
be the location o f sites in m ore favou rable environm ents b u t in a ran d om distribution.
o f linear banks, w h ich they con n ect w ith the introd uction o f the plough to the site. T h e ir physical lay o u t certain ly suggests a m ore ord erly
T h ese settlem ents then exp an d ed ou tw ard s from the pioneer holdings, giv in g rise to a series o f u n evenly spaced clusters. O n ly later, w hen re
regim e. T h ere is possible evidence in support o f
sources b ecam e the subject o f com petition , w ou ld sites space them selves into m ore regu lar p a t terns. T h is sequence was in itia lly dem onstrated
this succession from the pollen analysis o f n earb y
for a series o f d ocu m en ted settlem ents in N orth
arran gem en t
and
perhaps
a
m ore
intensive
peat.
A m erica, b u t the sam e m odel has been used in
A t first sight this sequence o f agricu ltu ral
analysis o f prehistoric settlem ents in P olan d
techniques seems to resem ble the increasingly ex a ctin g sequence o f low lan d areas, from forest
(H odder and O rto n , 1976, pp. 89 f f ) . T h ere is now one study o f the expansion o f
clearan ce through to parin g and b u rn ing. B ut
ea rly settlem ents in tw o areas o f southern E n g lan d
there is an im portan t d iffe re n ce : most o f the en
(Ellison and H arriss, 1972). It m akes use o f site
vironm ents in w h ich stone clearan ce w as neces
catch m en t analysis to dem onstrate th at from at
sary w ere a lrea d y so precariously b alan ced that they held little prospect for prolonged or inten sive a gricu ltu re. In this sense these h igh lan d
least the M id d le B ron ze A g e onw ards settlem ent sites w ere located so as to ob tain a varied and in creasin gly p rod u ctive ran ge o f soils. T h is seems
clearances on ly achieved a rch aeological visib ility
consistent w ith d em ograp h ic expansion, and the
in their term inal phases. I f the pressures w ere
extension o f settlem ent into areas o f greater
.4 Pure Soil -
Clearance and Colonisation
21
agricu ltu ral potential w ill have m ade m ore d e
to the earlier buildings. Interestingly enough,
m ands on m anpow er. A p articu larly arresting,
these later huts w ere also the largest (G elling,
if controversial, aspect o f this study has been its a p p licatio n to the Saxon period, through
1963* % • 0 T h ere is one im portant regional study o f settle
the analysis o f sequences o f place names. T h e
m ent grow th, a paper by J o b e y on the R o m an
results o f this territorial analysis seem ed to suggest tw o m ain m odels for expansion from the p rim ary
stone-built settlem ents betw een the Forth and
a re a s: the d evelopm ent o f new settlem ents in a
surface evidence, that m any o f these sites did in
virtu a l rin g round a parent site and their sim ple
fact show expansion: in upland areas the pro
the T y n e (1974). H e dem onstrates, m ain ly from
replication at an a p p roxim ately even spacing.
portion was abou t 31 per cent. E xcavation in
T hese are b asically eq u ivalen t to H u d so n ’s two
side these enclosures has shown quite clearly that
stages o f expansion, and the sam e range o f pro
the num ber o f houses did increase, and on sites
cedures is apparen t in the M id d le Ages (C his
w ith lim ited space this tendency is confirm ed by
holm , 1968, p. 127).
a fall in the size o f the later buildings. Th is
from the prehistoric inform ation : the evidence
estim ate com pares w ith a figure o f 30 per cent for those hill forts in southern Scotlan d w hich
for internal expansion
show field evidence for an increase in area (data
T h ere are tw o aspects o f the m odel to consider and
the evidence for
thresholds beyond w h ich the cleared areas could not support further grow th. It m ight be at this second stage that the new settlem ents w ould form .
from R C A M
Scotlan d,
1956 and
1957 and
R C A H M Scotlan d, 1967). It is interesting that in J o b e y ’s study, w hich covers m uch o f the same region, 19 per cent o f the hill forts are over-
O n e initial problem is to distinguish settlem ent
lain b y R o m an native settlem ents, but that these
expansion from the process o f settlem ent drift.
settlem ents include 50 per cent o f the largest
The
sites.
latter
can
be
defined
as
the
grad u al
linear or lateral m ovem ent o f a settlem ent, and
In other cases it is not possible to use the
is com p arab le to the horizon tal stratigrap h y
internal area as a basis for analysis; bu t here
characteristic o f cem eteries. It is a process best
rath er sim ilar results can be ach ieved b y con
d ocum en ted for Saxon and m edieval villages (Beresford, M . and H urst, 1971) and was usefully
sidering the hum an effort invested in the basic
defined b y D . L . C lark e in a discussion o f Beaker
the palisaded
settlem ents (1969, i, p. 57). It can arise from
B ritain seem to have been replaced b y earthw orks,
such basic factors as rotting house foundations, insanitary livin g floors, eroded arable plots and contam in ated pits. It is know n on extensive op ef. sites like the Iron A g e occupations at T w y w e ll, F en gate or P u dd leh ill (Jackson, 1975;
althou gh not all o f these should be classed as Torts’ ; and over 20 per cent o f these palisaded sites show evidence for at least one replacem ent
Pryor, 1974a; M athew s, 1976, pp. 44 ff.), b u t also extends to the location o f ind ivid u al features in enclosed com pounds. T h is is possibly seen at
1970). T h ere is some tendency for greater de velopm ent to take place on the double-palisaded sites, w here the w ork effort w ould in any case be
enclosures. For instance, over 40 per cent o f enclosures know n in
northern
o f the basic stockade, w hether or not an earth w ork was constructed later (data from R itch ie, A .,
G ussage A ll Saints, w here the distribution o f
greater, but the size o f the sam ple is unaccept-
features in the first two phases is alm ost m u tu ally
a b ly sm all (cf. G riffiths in B rad ley and Ellison,
exclusive (W ain w righ t and Sw itsur, 1976, fig. 3), and again at B urradon , w here in d ivid u al houses
1975. p- 228). T h ere is also evidence for local thresholds to
w ere replaced in the ad join in g plots (Jobey, 1970,
expansion w ithin an occupied area. Stanford,
fig.
5).
An
interm ediate
case
is
at
South
for exam ple, has shown that a n um ber o f hill
Barrule, w here the stone-built huts inside a hill
forts in the C en tral M arches increased their area
fort form ed clusters,
in w hich the construction
b y different proportions, but that the final en
o f new houses on the perip hery blocked all access
closures show an optim um size o f abou t 8 hectares
22
A Pure Soil — Clearance and Colonisation
(1972, p. 316). In a sim ilar w a y, the earthw ork-
ind ivid u al field systems can som etim es be re
defended enclosures o f W ales show distinctive
covered b y fieldw ork and checked against d o cu
regional size ranges. T h ese have been discussed
m en tary evidence. A fter d etailed field w ork in
by H o gg, w ho has defined eleven different groups
Bedfordshire, D avid H a ll has suggested that a
on this basis and has shown that there is ve ry
fairly regu lar relationship existed in this area b e
little overlap betw een them
(1972). In each
tw een the m axim u m size o f villages and the
area it seems that these enclosures did not d e
extent o f their a rab le lan d. O n good soils the
velop beyond a certain threshold. In another
greatest size o f the settlem ent is 7 per cent o f the
paper he also argued that there is a regu lar
area o f its arable lan d, b u t this w ou ld fall to
density o f houses inside hill forts (19 7 1). I f this
ju st 2-6 per cent if the a rab le w ere en tirely on the
has a w id e a p plicatio n , it m ight reveal another
less prod u ctive c la y (H all, 1972). T h a t the re
lim it to expansion. It is certain ly a p p aren t that
lationship is so regu lar is an argu m en t for p o p u
this density was greatest inside the sm aller ea rth
lation pressure (fig. 2 :5 ). It w ou ld be useful to
works (Atkinson, 1972, p. 64). O n the bou ld er
establish a series o f com p a ra b le param eters for
clay o f north-east E n glan d J o b ey has observed a
prehistoric sites, bu t this is rarely possible.
com p arab le pattern am ong the stone-built native
As an alternative, the resource catch m ents o f
farms (1974). H ere there is certain ly evid ence for
e a r ly settlem ents h ave been m uch studied. T h ese
an increase in the n um ber o f houses on each
h ave tw o possible im plications for the spread o f
site, b u t this increase was ap p aren tly cu rtailed at
sites. In a study based p a rtly upon m odern
a low er lim it than in upland areas n earby.
peasant agricu ltu re, C h isholm has suggested that
T h is last observation is especially im portan t in
restrictions o f m ob ility m ay h ave lim ited the dis
view o f the constant process o f selection b y w h ich
tance over w hich it w as profitab le to exp lo it
less successful settlem ents w ent out o f use. T h is
land from a single centre (1968). In the M id d le
placed corresp on d in gly greater pressures on those
Ages the m inim um distance betw een E nglish
sites w h ich w ere op tim ally located. U n til this
villages w as abou t i*6 km and in m ost areas all
happ ened , it m ay have been rare for settlem ents
the land was w ithin 4 km . W h en a g ricu ltu ral
to rem ain in b ein g for long. B ut once this occu rred
land exp an d ed b eyon d this lim it, it m igh t be
settlem ent m ob ility becam e increasingly w asteful. A t C h alto n , for exam ple, the later B ron ze A g e
m ore p ra ctica l to create another settlem ent. U n fortu n ately, this prin ciple is hard to recognise
sites w hich fell out o f use w ere replaced in the
in operation. W h ere there was com petition for space, eq u a lly placed settlem ents m igh t be closer together, and in areas w here there was still room for expansion there is no w a y o f inferring the ch an gin g b ou n d ary. A n a lo g y w ith C h ish o lm ’s w ork suggests that the 2-km -radius catch m en t
R o m a n period. In the Iron A g e these had appeared as gaps in a qu ite regu lar pattern o f settlem ents (C u n liffe, 1973).
area adopted b y Ellison and H arriss w ou ld only RESOURCE CATCHMENTS
be approp riate in this second situation. T h is
T h e relationship betw een resource catchm ents
radius works m od erately w ell w hen the authors
and settlem ents is m uch m ore com plex. T h e re is
consider the parishes o f the S axon period, bu t
a p ra ctica l lim it to the num ber o f people w h ich
the problem is that the villages w ere m ore exten
an area o f cleared land can support, ju st as
sive than most o f their prehistoric counterparts.
there is an op tim u m size for this territory b e
T h e ran ge o f areas is from
yond w h ich it w ou ld
have been sim pler to
(R a h tz, 1976). T h ere are tw o w ays o f ch eck in g
create a new settlem ent (cf. C hisholm , 1968). U n fo rtu n a tely, there is no com pletely reliab le
the usefulness o f this h yp o th etical catch m en t a rea: b y relatin g it to other estim ates o f the
m ethod o f estim ating popu lation or total territory from settlem ent area. A g ain , m edieval ex p eri
cleared area based on excav ated d a ta, or b y
ence can be helpful, since the full extent o f
historic sites w here proper field survey is a va ila b le.
2 to 5 hectares
m easuring it against the actu al sp acin g o f pre
.4 Pure Soil O n e site on w hich it is possible to check the Ellison and Harriss interpretation is L ittle W ood* b ury. H ere Bersu used the assum ed n um ber o f storage pits and granaries to calcu late that 73
Clearance and Colonisation
23
could be the use o f sherd scatters to discover the extent o f m anuring. T h e sam e conclusion,
that
a
2-km -radius
catch m ent is too large, m ay be d raw n from
bushels o f corn w ere p rob ab ly b eing stored each
published field survey. In at least six areas field
year (1940, p. 64). T h is figure was based upon
survey seems to show a rou gh ly regu lar pattern
an unfortunate m athem atical error and should
o f settlem ent w hich lends itself to sim ple c al
be corrected to abou t 666 bushels (Bowen, H . C .,
culation , althou gh the sam ple is too sm all for
19^9’ P- 1 1 ) • T h e same correction must be applied to B ersu’s estim ate o f the arable area needed
q u ality o f the origin al w ork does suggest that a
nearest neighbour analysis. In each case the
to produce this q u an tity o f corn, increasing his
representative pattern has been recovered. T h e
figure o f 20 acres to rou gh ly 180 acres (79 hec tares) . In Ellison and H arriss’s h ypothetical area,
sm allest spacing o f ap p aren tly contem porary sites
based upon a 2-km radius abou t the site, the
dow n H ill, H am pshire, w here sites are on average
is in the Iron A g e at C h alton , and on Ports-
best potential arable covers no less than 700
o*8 km apart (C unliffe, 1973; J . Johnston, pers.
hectares. W h a tev er allow an ce is m ade for fallow
c o m .). O n the boulder clay o f north-east E ngland
ing, there is a great d ifference betw een these
J o b e y noted that native settlem ents could occu r
figures, and the second estim ate seems m uch too
rou gh ly 1 km apart (1973, p. 48), w hile extensive
large. I f the estim ates w ere reduced propor
fieldw ork in C orn w all shows that the densest
tion ately the catch m en t area w ould have a radius
distribution o f rounds is at intervals o f 1*3 km
o f 0-7 km . O n e w a y o f tacklin g this problem
(Thom as, C ., 1966). T h is com pares w ell w ith
10% LU
_I
CO