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A Middle and Late Devensian sequence from the northern part of Kents Cavern (Devon, UK)

  • Rob Dinnis (Corresponding author)
  • , John Boulton
  • , Barry Chandler
  • , Jesse Davies
  • , Jennifer C. French
  • , Thomas Higham
  • , Louisa Jáuregui
  • , Mark Lewis
  • , Matthias Meyer
  • , Danielle Schreve
  • , Chris Stringer
  • , Chris Proctor

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

1920s/30s excavation of a Middle Devensian sequence in the northern part of Kents Cavern recovered important Late Middle and Early Upper Palaeolithic archaeological material, including Britain's oldest known Homo sapiens remains. Questions remain about this material, including how it came to be in the cave. Judged by the recorded distribution of finds it may have entered via the Northeast Gallery. A previously unrecorded entrance into the cave from the Northeast Gallery was identified in 2014, and a column through the entrance's sedimentary fill was excavated during 2015–2016. The results of that work are reported here. The entrance retains an intact and well-stratified Pleistocene sequence comparable to the ‘Cave Earth’ unit described previously inside the cave. The uppermost part of the newly recognised Northeast Gallery entrance sequence has been removed by historical excavation, with most of the remaining sediments spanning the Middle Devensian and earlier part of the Late Devensian. The sequence contains bone and pollen, and ancient mammalian DNA is preserved within the sediments. The base of the Northeast Gallery entrance sequence is formed of a clayey diamict comparable to the cave's ‘Breccia’ unit, a deposit currently understood as Middle Pleistocene, and previously identified only in Kents Cavern's southern chambers. Comparison of the excavated sequence with the historical record of the Vestibule excavation shows that the basal cave earth deposits in the Northeast Gallery entrance are significantly higher than those inside the cave. Although requiring further work to confirm, this suggests that the Northeast Gallery could have played a major role in the accumulation of material in the Vestibule during the Middle Devensian.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)925-943
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Quaternary Science
Volume40
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2025

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 601003 Archaeology

Keywords

  • cave sedimentology
  • Late Pleistocene
  • Middle Palaeolithic
  • Upper Palaeolithic

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