Article

Dates, diet, and dismemberment: Evidence from the coldrum megalithic monument, Kent

Details

Citation

Wysocki M, Griffiths S, Hedges REM, Bayliss A, Higham T, Fernandez-Jalvo Y & Whittle A (2013) Dates, diet, and dismemberment: Evidence from the coldrum megalithic monument, Kent. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 79, pp. 61-90. https://doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2013.10

Abstract
We present radiocarbon dates, stable isotope data, and osteological analysis of the remains of a minimum of 17 individuals deposited in the western part of the burial chamber at Coldrum, Kent. This is one of the Medway group of megalithic monuments - sites with shared architectural motifs and no very close parallels elsewhere in Britain - whose location has been seen as important in terms of the origins of Neolithic material culture and practices in Britain. The osteological analysis identified the largest assemblage of cut-marked human bone yet reported from a British early Neolithic chambered tomb; these modifications were probably undertaken as part of burial practices. The stable isotope dataset shows very enriched δ 15N values, the causes of which are not entirely clear, but could include consumption of freshwater fish resources. Bayesian statistical modelling of the radiocarbon dates demonstrates that Coldrum is an early example of a British Neolithic burial monument, though the tomb was perhaps not part of the earliest Neolithic evidence in the Greater Thames Estuary. The site was probably initiated after the first appearance of other early Neolithic regional phenomena including an inhumation burial, early Neolithic pottery and a characteristic early Neolithic post-and-slot structure, and perhaps of Neolithic flint extraction in the Sussex mines. Coldrum is the only site in the Medway monument group to have samples which have been radiocarbon dated, and is important both for regional studies of the early Neolithic and wider narratives of the processes, timing, and tempo of Neolithisation across Britain

Keywords
early Neolithic; megalithic monument; human remains; radiocarbon dates; Bayesian statistics; cut-marks

Journal
Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society: Volume 79

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2013
Publication date online17/07/2013
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/21947
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISSN0079-497X

People (1)

People

Professor Alexandra Bayliss

Professor Alexandra Bayliss

Professor, Biological and Environmental Sciences