Blick Mead Explained

Blick Mead
Location:near Amesbury
Region:Wiltshire
Coordinates:51.1774°N -1.7878°W
Type:Mesolithic site
Epochs:Mesolithic
Excavations:2005 onwards
Designation1:World Heritage Site
Designation1 Number:373
Designation1 Date:1986[1]
Gbgridref:SU14934204

Blick Mead is a chalkland spring in Wiltshire, England, separated by the River Avon from the northwest edge of the town of Amesbury. It is close to an Iron Age hillfort known as Vespasian's Camp and about a mile east of the Stonehenge ancient monument. Evidence from archaeology excavation at the site since 2005 indicates that there was continuous human habitation from 10,000 BP (8,000 BCE) to 6,000 BP (4,000 BCE).

35,000 worked flints and 2400 animal bones, some cooked, mostly from aurochsen, have been found at the site.[2] There is also the remains of a pit dwelling. A few finds have been used to radiocarbon date the time of settlement.[3] It is thought that the site would have been an attractive place to camp or dwell, with a spring that never freezes over; the issuing water has a constant temperature of around .

Oxygen isotope analysis of a single canine premolar found at Blick Mead has been interpreted as evidence that people had travelled a long way to get there and that this was associated with its proximity to Stonehenge.[4] However, this is inconclusive as, while the isotope values are not consistent with the dog originating at the site, it represents the only example of a dietary isotope profile for a tooth from the Mesolithic, from any species.[5]

A rare algae called Hildenbrandia lives in the spring and causes stones taken from it to turn bright red on exposure to air in a matter of hours. In Mesolithic times this could have given the place a magical significance. Its closeness to Stonehenge has led to theories that it is the attraction that first brought hunters to the area, with the colour-changing stones giving the place a spiritual significance.[6] [7] [8] [9]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/373 UNESCO World Heritage site No 373
  2. News: Britain's first city discovered as archaeologists say it was home of people who built Stonehenge. Knapton. Sarah. 2019-11-02. The Telegraph. 2019-11-04. en-GB. 0307-1235.
  3. Web site: Jacques. David. 2013. Discoveries at Vespasian's Camp, near Stonehenge, Wiltshire, 2005–2012. live. 2021-06-04. University of Buckingham. en. https://web.archive.org/web/20140306212725/http://www.buckingham.ac.uk:80/research/hri/fellows/jacques/stonehenge-discoveries . 6 March 2014 .
  4. Book: Roberts, Alice . Ancestors . Simon & Schuster UK . 2021 . 978-1-4711-8804-6 . 235.
  5. Rogers . B. . Gron . K. J. . Montgomery . J. . Rowley-Conwy . P. . Nowell . G. . Peterkin . J. . Jacques . D. . 2019-04-01 . Isotopic analysis of the Blick Mead dog: A proxy for the dietary reconstruction and mobility of Mesolithic British hunter-gatherers . Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports . en . 24 . 712–720 . 10.1016/j.jasrep.2019.02.022 . 133637352 . 2352-409X.
  6. News: Vespasian's Camp: Cradle of Stonehenge. 2013-04-19. Current Archaeology. en-GB. 2017-01-16.
  7. Web site: The New Discoveries at Blick Mead: the Key to the Stonehenge Landscape. 2013. University of Buckingham. 2017-01-15.
  8. Web site: 'The Cradle of Stonehenge'? Blick Mead - a Mesolithic Site in the Stonehenge Landscape -Lecture Transcript. Professor David Jacques FSA. 21 September 2016. Gresham College. 2017-01-15.
  9. Web site: The Blick Mead excavations have transformed the understanding of the Stonehenge landscape. 2017-01-15. Stonehenge News and Information. 2017-01-15.