Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wzw2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-10T15:12:06.068Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Kitchen Midden Site at Westward Ho!, Devon, England: ecology, age, and relation to changes in land and sea level

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

D. M. Churchill
Affiliation:
Department of Botany, Monash University, Melbourne

Extract

The occurrence of submerged forests in places along the British coast has long attracted attention, and led to speculation on the relative displacement in land and sea levels that enabled such forests to grow. Many of these forest beds are only visible between high and low water of the spring tides; others, not so readily seen, are known to occur in beds to a depth 60 feet below present sea level. The melting of the ice sheets after the last glaciation and the consequent rise of sea level accounts for the submergence of many of these forest beds, although the actual height at which they are found, may be affected by displacement from the contemporary level by subsequent compaction of sediments and tectonic movement. The submerged forest at Westward Ho! rests on consolidated sediments and is not subject to change in level due to compaction. The tectonic factor is discussed in relation to analogous deposits of comparable age elsewhere in southern Britain.

The presence of the submerged forest in Bideford Bay (Barnstaple Bay) at Westward Ho!, was recorded in a survey published by De la Beche in 1839, and in 1866 Ellis called attention to the presence of flints in the submerged forest bed. The peat was found in patches between a pebble ridge and low water mark and in places for about 200 yards along the beach.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1965

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Adamson, R. S. 1932. ‘Notes on the Natural Regeneration of Woodland in Essex’, J. Ecol., vol. 20, pp. 152–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bate, C. S. 1866. ‘An Attempt to Approximate the Date of the Flint Flakes of Devon and Cornwall’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 1, pp. 128–36.Google Scholar
Churchill, D. M. 1965. ‘The Displacement of Deposits formed at Sea-level 6,500 years ago in Southern Britain’, Quaternaria (in press).Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D. 1955. ‘A Microlithic Industry from the Cambridgeshire Fenland and Other Industries of Sauveterrian Affinities from Britain’, PPS, vol. 21, pp. 320.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D. and Godwin, H. 1962. ‘The Neolithic in the Cambridgeshire Fens’, Antiquity, vol. 36, pp. 1023.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De la Beche, . 1839. Report on the Geology of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset, London.Google Scholar
Ellis, E. H. 1866. ‘On a Flint-find in a Submerged Forest of Barnstaple Bay, near Westward Ho!’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 1, pp. 80–1.Google Scholar
Ellis, H. S. 1867. ‘On Some Mammalian Bones and Teeth, found in the Submerged Forest at Northam’, Rep. & Trans. Devon Assoc., vol. 2, pp. 162–3.Google Scholar
Gardner, K. 1957. ‘Mesolithic Survey—North Devon’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 89, pp. 160–74.Google Scholar
Godwin, H. 1940. ‘A Boreal Transgression of the Sea in Swansea Bay’, New Phytol., vol. 39, pp. 308–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godwin, H. 1956. The History of the British Flora, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Godwin, H. 1960. ‘Radiocarbon Dating and Quaternary History in Britain’, Proc. Roy. Soc. B., vol. 153, pp. 287320.Google Scholar
Hall, T. M. 1865. Notes on the Discovery of Flint Implements at Croyden and Northam, North Devon. Privately printed. (Not seen by author).Google Scholar
Hall, T. M. 1866. The Geology of North Devon—A Lecture to the Exeter Naturalists' Club at Westward Ho! in 1865 (23 pp.). Privately printed, London.Google Scholar
Hall, T. M. 1878. ‘A Sketch of the Geology of Devonshire’, White's History, Gazetteer, and Directory of the County, pp. 319. (Also reprinted through the 3rd edition of 1890).Google Scholar
Hall, T. M. 1879. ‘The Submerged Forest of Barnstaple Bay’, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., vol. 35, p. 106 (Proceedings).Google Scholar
Iversen, J. 1944. ‘Viscum, Hedera and Ilex as Climatic Indicators’, Geol. Fören. Stockh. Förh., vol. 66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jelgersma, S. 1961. Holocene Sea Level Changes in the Netherlands, Maastricht.Google Scholar
Kassas, M. 1952. ‘Studies in the Ecology of Chippenham Fen. III: The Forty Acre Wood’, J. Ecol., vol. 40, pp. 5061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambert, J. M. 1951. ‘Alluvial Stratigraphy and Vegetational Succession in the Region of the Bure Valley Broads. III’, J. Ecol., vol. 39, pp. 149–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, A. R. H. 1959. ‘The Stratigraphy and History of Groenvlei, a South African Coastal Fen’, Aust. J. Bot., vol. 7, pp. 142–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moss, C. E. 1913. Vegetation of the Peak District, Cambridge, pp. 61–4.Google Scholar
Pengelly, W. 1868. ‘The Submerged Forest and Pebble Ridge of Barnstaple Bay’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 2, pp. 415–22.Google Scholar
Pons, L. J., Jelgersma, S., Wiggers, A. J. and de Jong, J. D. 1963. ‘Evolution of the Netherlands Coastal Area during the Holocene’, Ned. Geol. Mijnb. Gen. Geol. Ser., vols. 21–2, pp. 197208.Google Scholar
Reid, C. 1913. Submerged Forests, Cambridge, pp. 61–4.Google Scholar
Rogers, E. H. 1946. ‘The Raised Beach, Submerged Forest and Kitchen Midden of Westward Ho! and the Submerged Stone Row of Yelland’, Proc. Devon Archaeol. Expl. Soc., vol. 3, pp. 109–35.Google Scholar
Rogers, I. 1908. ‘On the Submerged Forest at Westward Ho! Bideford Bay’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 40, pp. 249–59.Google Scholar
Salisbury, E. J. 1918. ‘The Ecology of Scrub in Hertfordshire; A Study in Colonization’, Trans. Herts. Nat. Hist. Soc., vol. 17, pp. 5364.Google Scholar
Walker, D. 1956. ‘A Site at Stump Cross, near Grassington, Yorkshire, and the Age of the Pennine Microlithic Industry’, PPS, XXII (1956), pp. 23–8.Google Scholar
Worth, R. H. 1934. ‘An Antler from the Submerged Forest at Westward Ho!’, Rep. & Trans. Devon. Assoc., vol. 46, p. 127.Google Scholar