HOME PAGE
 
 
  To James B Kenworthy,  a valued friend and mentor
  Without his willing help and encouragement this project would never have taken place.
 
 
  ?Late Upper Paleolithic
 
 
  The
  large
  blade
  (left),
  picked
  up
  during
  family
  fieldwalking 
  (1978-9)
  at
  Crathes,
  was
  only
  recently
  identified
  as
  being 
  ‘definitely
  possible
  Late
  Upper
  Paleolithic’
  by
  Torben
  Ballin,
  via 
  Caroline Wickham-Jones (pers com).
 
 
 
  
Uncovering one of the largest Mesolithic Sites in the UK
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  OFARS FIELDWALKING SURVEY
    2008 - 2012
  Lithic evidence from five fields bordering the River Dee
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  The
  major
  part
  of
  the
  assemblage
  relates
  to 
  the
  Mesolithic
  with
  diagnostic
  broad
  (top) 
  and
  narrow
  blade
  (lower
  right)
  microliths 
  together with microburins (lower left). 
 
 
  An
  Early
  Neolithic
  component
  is 
  indicated
  by
  leaf-shaped
  arrowheads 
  (upper).
  
  Flaked
  knives
  (lower
  left),
   
  and
  a
  ground
  and
  polished
  knife 
  (lower
  right)
  
  show
  Later
  Neolithic 
  activity.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  A
  barbed
  and
  tanged
  arrowhead
  (right),
  also
  picked
  up
  during
  earlier 
  fieldwalking at Crathes, suggests later activity in the Early Bronze Age.
 
 
  Modern
  humans
  (
  Homo
  sapiens
  )
  arrived
  in
  Britain
  about
  40,000
  years
  ago,
  after
  a
  period
  (180,000
  -
  60,000 
  years ago) of severe ice-ages.  The last of these, the Younger Dryas, ended about 11,700 years ago.
  Until
  recently,
  it
  was
  thought
  that
  evidence
  for
  human
  occupation
  of
  Scotland
  dated
  only
  to
  the
  Mesolithic 
  period
  (ca.
  4,000
  -
  8,000
  BC),
  but
  more
  recent
  fieldwork
  has
  pushed
  this
  back
  to
  the
  Late
  Upper
  Paleolithic, 
  going
  back
  to
  12,000BC,
  closely
  following
  the
  retreating
  glaciers.
  
  Lithics
  dating
  to
  this
  period
  have
  now
  been 
  identified from a few locations along the banks of the River Dee, including the river bank at Crathes. 
 
 
 
  This website describes the fieldwork done by OFARS along the northern river bank at 
  Crathes, to discover the extent of the scatter, now thought to be one of the largest 
  Mesolithic sites in the UK.  
 
 
 
  The
  OFARS
  collection
  also
  included
  diagnostic 
  implements
  showing
  activity
  during
  
  the
  Neolithic.
   
  Earlier
  family
  collections
  indicated
  an
  Early
  Bronze 
  age, and a possible Late Upper Paleolithic presence.
 
 
 
  Microliths,
  originally
  referred
  to
  as
  ‘pygmy
  flints’,
  are 
  small
  worked
  pieces
  used
  in
  making
  composite
  tools.
   
  Microburins
  are
  waste
  products
  resulting
  from
  the 
  manufacture of microliths.
 
 
  This
  continuous
  scatter
  of
  flints
  through
  the
  five
  fields
  extending
  1.75
  km 
  along
  the
  north
  bank
  of
  the
  River
  Dee
  at
  Crathes
  and
  250m
  to
  the
  north
  in 
  the
  widest
  part,
  is
  one
  of
  the
  largest
  Mesolithic
  sites
  in
  the
  UK
  (Caroline 
  Wickham-Jones  2016 page 50)
 
 
  Acknowledgements
  We
  would
  like
  to
  thank
  Alan
  Saville,
  Caroline
  Wickham-Jones,
  Ann
  Pirie
  and
  many
  others
  for
  much 
  appreciated encouragement and help.
  Many
  thanks
  also
  to
  the
  OFARS
  fieldwalkers
  for
  turning
  out
  in
  all
  weathers,
  especially
  Angela
  Groat
   
  during
  2008,
  2009,
  2011,
  and
  2012,
  and
  Marlene
  West
  during
  2008,
  and
  2009.
  
  Family
  members 
  Premala
  and
  Jovita
  joined
  us
  in
  2008,
  2009
  and
  2011.
  
  Sadly,
  deteriorating
  health
  prevented
  James 
  from  accompanying  us after 2008. 
  I
  must
  also
  thank
  Dinkar
  Sabnis
  Sr
  for
  photographing
  the
  flints
  and,
  unless
  labelled
  otherwise,
  the 
  remaining
  
  photographs,
  and
  also
  for
  his
  interest
  and
  company
  on
  the
  many
  occasions
  when
  just
  the 
  two of us trudged up and down the fields together. 
  And lastly we would like to thank those concerned for allowing us access to the fields.
  Dinkar
  Sabnis
  Jr
  organised
  and
  put
  this
  website
  together.
  I
  have
  very
  much
  appreciated
  his
  patience 
  and
  painstaking
  attention
  to
  detail
  
  not
  only
  regarding
  the
  website,
  but
  also
  his
  knowledge
  of 
  Microsoft Excel.
  I 
 
 
  After
  the
  hunter/fisher/gatherers
  of
  the
  Paleolithic 
  and
  the
  Mesolithic,
  the
  Neolithic
  period
  (ca.
  4,000
  - 
  2,500 BC saw the introduction of pottery and farming.
 
 
  During
  the
  transition
  to
  metal
  working,
  flint
  implements
  were
  still
  being 
  made in the Bronze Age (ca. 2,500 - 800BC), .
 
 
  Hand-held
  GPS
  was
  used
  for
  recording
  the
  E
  and
  N
  co-ordinates
  of
  each
  find,
  and
  
  Microsoft 
  Excel
  for
  cataloguing,
  recording
  of
  attributes,
  charting
  the
  spacial
  distribution
  of
  the
  flints 
  (almost 10,000),  and for further lithic analysis.