Leicester Mercury

Search on for traces of Ice Age hunters

BRADGATE PARK DIG SEEKING 14,000-YEAR-OLD

- By TOM MACK thomas.mack@reachplc.com @T0Mmack FLINT TOOLS

DIGGING has begun at Bradgate Park to search for evidence of Ice Age hunters.

Archaeolog­ists want to know more about what was happening 14,000 years ago.

They believe that towards the end of the last Ice Age, as the British Isles began to thaw out, packs of hunters camped in the area.

The dig began on Tuesday and will continue until September 23, funded by National Lottery cash as part of the Ice Age Journeys project.

The team hopes to discover the remains of flint tools near the River Lin at the east end of Little Matlock Gorge – where prehistori­c hunters would be likely to search for prey, kill animals and cut them up to use their meat, skins and bones.

James Dymond, director of Bradgate Park Trust, said: “Many parks in Leicesters­hire are vibrantly rich in history and we’re really excited to be bringing an archaeolog­ical dig into the park as a landmark of historic interest.

“The team at Ice Age Journeys are specialist­s in their field and we’re really honoured to be working alongside them.

“For many of our volunteers, this project marks their first excavation so we’re all looking forward to seeing what’s discovered.”

The volunteers will be digging pits and sieving the soil to look for small flint points and barbs from spears, darts and knives that would have been used for butchery.

Ice Age Journeys archaeolog­ist Daryl Garton said: “We want to try to communicat­e with the people of Leicesters­hire and the surroundin­g area about the historic importance of this site.

“Locals and visitors will know the story about the forgotten queen, Lady Jane Grey, who was born and raised in Bradgate Park, but there is history at this park that runs much deeper that what remains on the surface and this dig will, hopefully, uncover that.”

Bradgate Park’s team will be hosting free, themed activities for children. Today and tomorrow, from 11am to 3pm, volunteers will be leading activities suitable for children outside the Visitor Centre in the middle of the park that give an insight into the Ice Age.

Nick Rushton, chairman of Bradgate Park Trust, said: “Volunteers are fundamenta­l in the operations of our parks and it is pleasing to see some of them experienci­ng an excavation for the very first time.

“Parks and open spaces, like Bradgate, have been a lifeline during the past 18 months of the Covid pandemic and we’re pleased to be kickstarti­ng these opportunit­ies again.”

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