Become a Patron! Treasure Hunting Neanderthal Flint Tools / Mousterian Treasure Finds Hunting for treasure and prehistoric finds in the great outdoors. Watch as we discover, beneath thousands of years of mud – Neanderthal, Mesolithic and Neolithic worked flint tools, on a site that has yielded lots of surprise discoveries, including bone from an ancient …
Become a Patron! Neolithic Treasure Hunt | Stone Age Flint Arrows | Hammers | Axes Join Stephen and Yhana as they aim to understand more about a Neolithic Site in Essex, England. The settlement stretches for about 400 – 410 meters and much of it is buried beneath a wooded nature reserve. The area has …
Become a Patron! Mesolithic Treasure Hunting Stephen and Yhana go in search of a possible Mesolithic / Neolithic Camp Site and a prehistoric pathway that ran northwards from a Neolithic / Bronze Age Cursus in a straight line (True North) and ended at Seahenge in Norfolk. Their journey takes them to the banks of the …
Become a Patron! Treasure Hunting, Field Walking, Medieval and Neolithic Finds Stephen and Yhana head out on a field walking trip and find 800 year old finger prints on a medieval sherd of pottery. Along the way Stephen and Yana also find neolithic tools, including flint scrapers and a very primitive, crude flint neolithic knife …
The Neolithic British Isles refers to the period of British, Irish and Manx history that spanned from c. 4000 to c. 2,500 BCE. The final part of the Stone Age in the British Isles, it was a part of the greater Neolithic, or “New Stone Age“, across Europe. Humans first settled down and began farming. …
Palaeolithic Stone Tools The Palaeolithic is often divided into lower, middle and upper. British Isles: Humans probably first arrived in Britain around 800,000 BC. These early inhabitants had to cope with extreme environmental changes and they left Britain at least seven times when conditions became too bad. The period lasted between 800,000 and 12,000 years ago which saw the end of the last …
The Neolithic British Isles refers to the period of British, Irish and Manx history that spanned from c. 4000 to c. 2,500 BCE. The final part of the Stone Age in the British Isles, it was a part of the greater Neolithic, or “New Stone Age“, across Europe. Humans first settled down and began farming. …
The Neolithic British Isles refers to the period of British, Irish and Manx history that spanned from c. 4000 to c. 2,500 BCE. The final part of the Stone Age in the British Isles, it was a part of the greater Neolithic, or “New Stone Age“, across Europe. Humans first settled down and began farming. …
Mesolithic stone tools The Mesolithic is the name given to the period between the end of the last ice age, In Britain the Mesolithic (Middle Stone) period began around 12,000 years ago as the climate began to warm up at the end of the last Ice Age. Trees and plants began to grow again and forest animals such as deer crossed the land bridge …
Mesolithic stone tools The Mesolithic is the name given to the period between the end of the last ice age, In Britain the Mesolithic (Middle Stone) period began around 12,000 years ago as the climate began to warm up at the end of the last Ice Age. Trees and plants began to grow again and forest animals such as deer crossed the land bridge …