Gathering Time presents the results of a major dating
programme that re-writes the early Neolithic of Britain
by more accurately dating enclosures, a phenomenon that
first appeared in the early Neolithic: places of
construction, labour, assembly, ritual and deposition.
The project has combined hundreds of new radiocarbon
dates with hundreds of existing dates, using a Bayesian
statistical framework. Such formal chronological
modelling is essential if significantly more precise and
robust date estimates are to be achieved than those
currently available from informal inspection of
calibrated radiocarbon dates. The resulting dating
project included over 35 enclosures - the largest study
so far attempted in a Bayesian framework. This
establishes a new chronology for causewayed and related
enclosures in southern Britain, which appeared in the
final decades of the 38th century cal BC, increased in
number dramatically in the 37th century cal BC, and
began no longer to be built by the end of the 36th
century cal BC. Several enclosures were of short
duration - in some cases probably in use for less than a
generation - though some examples do conform to the
conventional assumption of a long primary use-life. In
Ireland, enclosures of this kind are much scarcer. The
project helped to date two of these: Donegore, Co.
Antrim and Magheraboy, Co. Sligo. As well as
establishing a new chronology for enclosures, Gathering
Time also places these results into their wider context,
by considering the chronology of the early Neolithic as
a whole. Well over a thousand other radiocarbon dates
have been critically assessed and modelled in a Bayesian
framework - for settlement, monument building and other
activity, region by region across southern Britain and
across Ireland as a whole (a brief comparative study of
Scotland as far north as the Great Glen is also
included). Generally in southern Britain other Neolithic
activity can be dated before the beginnings of monument
building and, among the monuments, long barrows, long
cairns, and related forms clearly preceded the earliest
causewayed enclosures. The first Neolithic things and
practices probably appeared in south-east England in the
41st century cal BC, arguably by some kind of
small-scale colonisation from the adjacent continent,
and spread at a variable pace across the rest of Britain
and Ireland over the next two and a half centuries or
more, a process involving acculturation of local people
as well as immigrants. Enclosures may have been adapted
as a social strategy of harnessing the power of the
distant and the exotic, and perhaps old ancestral ties
to the European continent, in a dynamic and rapidly
changing social milieu. Close attention is given to
themes of deposition, material culture and different
kinds of social interaction, from networks of exchange
to episodes of violence. A high tempo of change
continued, as very different constructions came to be
built from the 36th century cal BC onwards: the linear
and more arcane cursus monuments. The study of Irish
Neolithic chronology reveals significant patterning,
including a short currency for rectangular timber houses
in the 37th century cal BC, but also highlights the
challenge of establishing more reliable chronologies,
for monuments in particular. Alternative scenarios for
the date and nature of the beginning of the Neolithic in
Ireland are modelled. Gathering Time ends with
reflections on the nature and pace of change in
prehistory. If generational timescales are now within
our grasp routinely, more subtle and individualised
kinds of (pre)history can and must be written, and the
conventional frame of the long-term must shift from
being familiar and comfortable to problematic. |
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