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Timeline of prehistoric Britain

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Events from the prehistory of Britain (to 1 BC).

Conventions

  • This timeline focuses on species of Homo and covers the Pleistocene from the first evidence of humans.
  • The names used for glaciations and interglacials are those with historic usage for Britain and may not reflect the full climate detail of modern studies.
  • Dates for the Paleolithic are given as Before Present (BP), which uses 1 January 1950 as the commencement date of the age scale. All later dates are given as Before Christ (BC), which uses the conventional Gregorian calendar with AD 1 as the commencement date of the age scale.
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Events

Paleolithic

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A selection of stone tools from Eartham Pit, Boxgrove
  • c. 970,000 to 936,000 BP
  • c. 700,000 BP
  • c. 500,000 BP
  • c. 478,000 BP
    • Anglian glaciation begins – the most extreme in the Pleistocene. Britain extensively covered by ice.
  • c. 450,000 BP
  • c. 425,000 BP
    • Hoxnian Interglacial begins as the Anglian glaciation ends.
  • c. 400,000 BP
  • c. 352,000 BP
    • Wolstonian glaciation begins. Neanderthal occupation intermittent.
  • c. 180,000 BP
    • Neanderthals completely driven out. There will be little human occupation of any kind for many thousands of years.
  • c. 160,000 BP
  • c. 130,000 BP
  • c. 125,000 BP
  • c. 115,000 BP
    • Devensian glaciation ('Last Glacial Period') begins.
  • c. 60,000 BP
    • Sea levels have dropped sufficiently for Neanderthals to return to Britain in the warmer periods, possibly only as summer visitors.[11]
  • c. 44,000-41,000 BP
  • c. 40,000 BP
    • Neanderthals go extinct across Europe.
  • c. 26,000-13,000 BP
    • Dimlington stadial[14] ('Last Glacial Maximum'). Britain almost entirely under ice. Southern England a polar desert. Humans driven out.
  • c. 16,500-14,670 BP
    • Windermere interstadial[15] (the 'Allerød oscillation' or 'Late Glacial Interstadial'). Temperatures rise. Homo sapiens returns to Britain.
  • c. 12,890-11,700 BP
    • Loch Lomond stadial[16] ('Younger Dryas'). Temperatures drop rapidly. Humans driven out.
  • c. 11,700 BP
    • The Holocene epoch begins as the Younger Dryas stadial ends. The first Mesolithic people arrive and this marks the start of continuous human (Homo sapiens only) occupation.

Mesolithic

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The upper body of the Cheddar Man a Mesolithic skeleton.
  • c. 9335–9275 BC
    • The earliest date for structures and artefacts at Star Carr, Yorkshire, a site then inhabited for around 800 years.[17]
  • c. 7600 BC
    • Howick house, Northumberland, a Mesolithic building with stone tools, nut shells and bone fragments.
  • c. 7150 BC
    • Cheddar Man, the oldest complete human skeleton in Britain
  • c. 6500-6200 BC
    • Rising sea-levels cause the gradual flooding of Doggerland. The culminating tsunami caused by the Storegga Slide, likely contributes to the final isolation of Great Britain from the European mainland.
  • c. 6000 BC
    • The earliest evidence of some form of agriculture: Wheat of a variety grown in the Middle East was present on the Isle of Wight.[18]
  • c. 4600-3065 BC
    • Date range of artefacts from a Mesolithic midden on Oronsay, Inner Hebrides, giving evidence of diet.

Neolithic

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Stonehenge, a Neolithic stone monument constructed from 3000 BC to 2000 BC.

Bronze Age

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The Uffington White Horse, a Bronze Age hill figure.

Iron Age

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Old Oswestry, an Iron Age hillfort
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See also

References

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