Wilkinson, T. James., Murphy, P. L., Brown, N. and Heppell, E. M. (2012). Archaeology of the Essex Coast Volume II: Excavations at the Prehistoric Site of the Stumble. Essex County Council Historic Environment.

Title
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Title:
Archaeology of the Essex Coast Volume II: Excavations at the Prehistoric Site of the Stumble
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East Anglian Archaeology 144
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East Anglian Archaeology
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Volume:
144
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EAA_144_Hullbridge.pdf (75 MB) : Download
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Monograph (in Series)
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The unusual diversity of archaeological evidence found at the Stumble is described here, and viewed within its immediate and regional environmental setting and within the archaeological landscape of the region, a landscape that is becoming better known thanks to recent rescue excavations at nearby Chigborough and Slough House Farms. The Stumble is named after a mud bank in the Blackwater Estuary 700-800m to the east. The site is fully estuarine, being covered at high tide by some 3m of water, and positioned between 10 and 250m from the seaward edge of the saltmarsh. The occupation phases — earlier and later Neolithic, Early Bronze Age, Iron Age, Roman, Anglo-Saxon and post-medieval — are all well-represented on neighbouring dry land sites so the excavation of the Stumble, in view of the technical problems involved, requires some justification. Primarily, the types of evidence found at this site can usually only be found together on intertidal or wetland sites. Hence the Neolithic is represented by an intact land surface strewn with occupation debris and peppered by pits of various dimensions. Neither of these things would have survived the millennia of ploughing that have transformed most inland Neolithic habitation sites into little more than lithic scatters. This virtually intact Neolithic site was occupied during the 3rd millennium BC and a little earlier, when sea levels were significantly lower, so there is no preservation of waterlogged wood on the Neolithic site. Nevertheless, the quantity and quality of remaining inorganic remains is sufficient to justify excavation. The later Neolithic record is of a similar 'dry land' site inundated by a gradually rising sea level, but by the Iron Age the archaeological record had become quite different. Occupation debris, sherds and other artefacts are virtually absent, and instead wooden structures, single or multiple posts, brushwood and interwoven wattles remain. Clearly, at this stage of the Holocene marine transgression the locus of settlement had moved inland beyond the tidal fringe and the evidence from the Stumble must therefore represent activity that took place on salt marshes, along tidal creeks or on the mudflats.
Author
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Author:
Tony James Wilkinson
Peter L Murphy
Nigel Brown
Ellen M Heppell
Publisher
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Essex County Council Historic Environment
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2012
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1 84194 074 8
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ADS Archive (ADS Archive)
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03 Mar 2017