Yorkshire Post

NO SNOW DAYS FOR ANCESTORS

Ice age failed to deter them from hunting and gathering

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT TOOK only a few inches of snow to bring Yorkshire sliding to a halt the other week. But, we learned yesterday, the earth could literally have frozen over before our ancestors would have taken any notice.

New research has revealed that at Star Carr, inland from Scarboroug­h, the middle stoneage inhabitant­s at the end of the last ice age were probably impervious to the plummeting temperatur­es around them.

Not even a climate drop severe and dramatic enough to halt the developmen­t of woodland had any substantia­l impact on their activity.

The North Yorkshire archaeolog­ical site, which dates from around 9,000 BC and is considered one of the most significan­t in Europe, has given up its latest secrets after years of digging and laboratory work.

Researcher­s say the findings have shed new light on the sensitivit­y of primitive “hunter-gatherer” societies to environmen­tal change.

At Star Carr – where the cold snap lasted more than a century and where average temperatur­es dropped by more than three degrees in the space of a decade – the peat bogs have thrown up preserved examples not only of tools and artefacts, but of organic remains that scientists have been able to date and then compare with samples from other periods.

Experts from the University of York and Royal Holloway University of London, who picked through the layers of wetland deposits at the edge of the former lake basin in the Vale of Pickering, found evidence of houses built as large wooden platforms on the lake’s edge.

Nicky Milner, a professor at York, said: “We have been working at Star Carr for about 15 years and the site has produced an incredibly rare glimpse into the world of our Mesolithic ancestors who lived at the end of the ice age, about 11,000 years ago.

“Putting this archaeolog­ical data into the context of the climate and environmen­t is very exciting and shows that we need to keep an open mind when thinking about the effects of extreme climate on early population­s.”

She added: “We’re dealing with a very small piece of the jigsaw.

We don’t know an awful lot about these people but we have some insights. Nicky Milner, a professor at the University of York.

We don’t know an awful lot about these people but we have some insights into their behaviour.

“We do know that they made houses on the dry land and that they had fire and the skills to keep warm.”

She said the deer skulls that had also been unearthed, which were once used as headdresse­s, may have been a clue to the psychology or system of beliefs that helped them get through the most difficult times.

Prof Simon Blockley, of Royal Holloway, said the findings debunked suggestion­s that abrupt climate changes may have wiped out primitive population­s in northern Britain.

“Our study reveals, that at least in the case of the pioneering colonisers at Star Carr, early communitie­s were able to cope with extreme and persistent climate events,” Prof Blockley said.

“We found people were far more affected by smaller, localised changes to their environmen­t. Star Carr was once the site of an extensive lake and people lived around its edge. Over time the lake gradually became shallower and boggier, turning into fenland which eventually forced settlers to abandon the area.”

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 ??  ?? EARTH WORK: An artist’s reconstruc­tion, top, of the Star Carr site where archaeolog­ists, including Dr Nicky Milner, right, have been digging for 15 years. Inset, a deer skull discovery.
EARTH WORK: An artist’s reconstruc­tion, top, of the Star Carr site where archaeolog­ists, including Dr Nicky Milner, right, have been digging for 15 years. Inset, a deer skull discovery.

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