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A Mesolithic Chipping Floor at The Warren, Oakhanger, Selborne, Hants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

Extract

The object of this paper is to record and discuss the investigation of an unusually prolific Mesolithic chipping floor recently located on War Department land between Bordon Camp and the hamlet of Oakhanger, near Selborne, on the Hampshire Greensand. These lands are particularly sterile and undulating, and are dissected by a stream which emerges from Oakhanger Ponds to enter the Oakhanger Stream about a mile to the north (fig. 1). The section west of this stream is named the Warren, and that on the east is called the Slab. The site now being discussed is one of five located on the Warren and Slab, and is known as Site V. The group forms part of a series fringing the watercourse known sectionally as the Oakhanger Stream, Kingsley Stream, Oxney Stream, and the Slea, which eventually feeds the Frensham Wey. Thus the Oakhanger sites integrate with the important network investigated in West Surrey.

The Warren, together with the Slab, forms a roughly quadrangular area with its northern side coinciding, for about a mile, with the Bordon-Oakhanger road. Together they make up, approximately, a square mile of rough ground which is marshy along the course of the dividing stream. Geologically it is on Folkestone Sands which, in this area, are extensively covered by blown-sand deposits. Towards Oakhanger, half a mile to the north, these deposits are unusually thick and form dunes. In the Folkestones there is much carstone in thin layers which, here and there, tend to induce marshy conditions. The nearest chalk outcrop is some two miles to the westward in the Selborne district.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1953

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References

page 21 note 1 Rankine, W. F., Mesolithic Survey of the West Surrey Greensand, 1949, Research Paper No. 2. Surrey Arch. SocGoogle Scholar.

page 25 note 1 i.e. examples with the facet of detachment at the point undeveloped.

page 25 note 2 Clark, , Ant. J., XIV (1934), fig. 4, Nos. 52, 53CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

page 25 note 3 Moore, , PPS, XVI (1950)Google Scholar, fig. 4, Nos. 4758.

page 27 note 1 These include, presumably, many broken specimens.

page 27 note 2 The largest is 2½ inches long and 2 inches wide; the smallest ¾ inch long and ½ inch wide.

page 33 note 1 Clark, and Rankine, , PPS, 1939Google Scholar, pl. XI. cf. Rankine, , PPS, XV (1949), 193Google Scholar.

page 33 note 2 Rankine, , Mesolithic Survey of the West Surrey Greensand, 1949, Research Paper No. 2. Surrey Arch. Soc. Appendix V, p. 39Google Scholar.

page 33 note 3 Marsden, J. G., PPSEA, III (1920), 5966Google Scholar.

page 35 note 1 Rankine, W. F., ‘Pebbles of Non-local Rock in Mesolithic Chipping Floors’, Proc. Preh. Soc. 1949 (N.S., vol. XV), p. 193CrossRefGoogle Scholar.