What's happening at Hampton Cottage, 64 Church Street, Leatherhead KT22 8DP

Wednesday, 20 February 2019

TALK ON BLICK MEAD: KEY TO THE STONEHENGE LANDSCAPE



Surrey Archaeological Society's Prehistoric Group has organised a lecture at Letherhead Institute on excavations at Blick Mead, near Stonehenge but pre-dating it with an estimated date of occupation from around 7500-4700 BC.

Archaeologist David Jacques has been leading the project by the University of Buckingham’s Humanities Research Institute since 2005. It has uncovered very large amounts of Mesolithic material from the site, a part of the Stonehenge landscape known as ‘Vespasian’s Camp’ on the mistaken assumption that it was the remains of a former Roman settlement. Some 12,000 pieces of flint have been unearthed, as well as over 500 pieces of bone dating from over 8000 years ago. Virtually all the tools are in pristine condition – indeed, some of the team have accidentally cut their fingers on them.

The site had been ignored as it was assumed that any archaeological evidence would have been destroyed in the course of  landscaping of the area as a park for a neighbouring country house in the 18th century. But radiocarbon dating of objects now shows that Blick Mead was in continuous use for almost 3000 years.

The lecture on Tuesday,  21 May, starts at 7.30pm Tickets cost £3.