Grimes Graves

Grimes Graves is a large Neolithic flint mining complex near Brandon in England close to the border between Norfolk and Suffolk. It was worked between around 2300 and 1800 BC, when the growing prevalence of bronze tools rendered its products obsolete. It extends over an area of more than 20 ha (0.2 km² / 50 acres) and consists of almost 400 shafts dug into the natural chalk to reach seams of flint. The largest shafts are more than 13 m (30 feet) deep and 12 m in diameter at the surface. It has been calculated that more than 1,000 tons of chalk had to removed from the larger shafts, taking 12 men around six months, before stone of sufficient quality was reached. An upper and middle seam of flint was dug through on the way to the deeper third seam which most interested the miners. In order to remove the chalk efficiently the ancient miners built wooden platforms and ladders as they dug downwards and piled the spoil next to the shaft opening or dumped it into exhausted shafts. The landscape around Grimes Graves has a characteristic pockmarked appearance caused by the infilled shafts. This is probably what inspired the later Saxon inhabitants of the area to name it after their god Grim (more commonly known as Odin); the shafts were not investigated however and their purpose not understood until the nineteenth century. The miners used picks fashioned from the antler of red deer. They probably used wooden shovels although this is only inferred by analogy with other flint mines with better preservative conditions. Analysis of the antlers by archaeologists has shown that the miners were mainly right-handed and favoured the left antlers out of those that were naturally shed seasonally by the deer. Once they had reached the flint, the miners dug lateral galleries outwards at the bottom, following the flint. The largest shafts yielded as much as 8 tons of flint nodules which were brought to the surface and roughly worked into shape on site. The blank tools were then traded elsewhere for final finishing. It is estimated that 8 tons of flint could have produced as many as 10,000 of the hand axes which were the mines' main product. Multiplied out across the site, Grimes Graves probably produced around 5,000,000 axes during its lifespan. One unproductive shaft appears to have been turned into a shrine. An altar of flint lumps had been built with a chalk lamp at its base and antler picks piled around. In front of the altar had been placed a Venus figurine of chalk, a chalk phallus and some balls, also of chalk. It may have been an attempt to ensure that the mine remained productive or 'fertile' after this particular shaft turned out to have little flint in it. Such a large industry would have required supporting infrastructure. Assuming no more than two shafts were open at any one time, around 120 red deer would have needed to be bred and managed nearby in order to provide a steady supply of antler as well as skin, food and other products that the miners would require. In common with the difficult location of the Langdale axe industry, it has been suggested that Neolithic peoples placed great emphasis on acquiring their flint axes from hard to reach locations and that such effort gave the tools greater significance. Earlier flint mines in Britain such as Cissbury in Sussex did not approach the size and complexity of the operation at Grimes Graves and it is likely that tools from Grimes Graves were deemed to be in some way important over a wide area. Grimes Graves is open to the public and it is possible to descend and explore some of the galleries.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
azithromycin
canada dry
pontiac fiero
united states automobile club
basque country
contact centres
open wheel
minuet in c for keyboard (mozart)
eelv
club soda
hradec krlov region
sodium citrate
magic bullet
calcium citrate
lazy bones
rivers of iceland
socialism with a human face
palos verdes
necker island
sprint cars
naval station newport
projectscim
jrs
cruelty to animals
motion for more definite statement
pomace
james quick tillis
jkuls fjllum
triality
noni
hvt
midget cars
vysocina region
so(8)
bambi (1942 movie)
iron ring
carlsbad region
the good, the bad and the wealthy
the way of the vaselines: a complete history
magenta (disambiguation)
drake bell
captain beyond
olomouc region
pardubice region