[CY] Antiquity of Man, pp. 154, 155.
For a long time geologists had been familiar with the fact that these terraces of the Thames contain the remains of numerous extinct animals, among which are included the mammoth and a species of rhinoceros. Upon directing special attention to the subject, it was found that, at various intervals, the remains of man, also, had been reported from the same deposits. As long ago as 1715 Mr. Conyers discovered a palæolithic implement, in connection with the skeleton of an elephant, at Black Mary’s, near Gray’s Inn Lane, London. This implement is preserved in the British Museum, and closely resembles typical specimens from the gravel at Amiens. Other implements of similar character have been found in the valley of the Wey near Guilford, also in the valley of the Darent, near Whitstable in Kent, and between Heme Bay and the Reculvers. While the exact position of these implements in the gravel had not been so positively noted as in the case of those found at Amiens and Abbeville, there can be little doubt that man, in company with the extinct animals mentioned, inhabited the valley of the Thames at a period when its annual floods spread over the whole terrace-plain upon which the main part of London is built.
In the valley of the Ouse, however, near Bedford, the discovery of palæolithic implements in the gravel terraces connected with the Glacial period and in intimate association with bones of the elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus, and other extinct animals, has been as fully established as in the valley of the Somme. The discoveries here were first made in the year 1860, by Mr. James Wyatt, in a gravel-pit at Biddenham, two miles northwest of Bedford. Two flint implements were thrown out by workmen in one day from undisturbed strata thirteen feet below the surface, and numerous other specimens have since been found in a similar situation.
The valley of the Ouse is bordered on either side by sections of a superficial blanket of glacial drift containing many transported boulders of considerable size. The valley is here about two miles wide, and ninety feet deep. The gravel deposit, however, in which the implements were found, is only about thirty feet above the present level of the river, and hence represents the middle period of the work of the river in erosion.
Another locality in England in which similar discoveries have been made, is at Hoxne, about five miles from Diss, in Suffolk County. Like that in the valley of the Thames, however, the implements were found a long time before the significance of the discovery was recognized. Mr. John Frere reported the discovery to the Society of Antiquaries in 1801, and gave some of the implements both to the society and to the British Museum, in whose collections they are still preserved. The implements are of the true palæolithic type, and existed in such abundance, and were so free from signs of wear, that the conclusion seemed probable that a manufactory of them had been uncovered. As many as five or six to the square yard are said to have been found. Indeed, their numbers were so great that the workmen “had emptied baskets of them into the ruts of the adjoining road before becoming aware of their value.”
The deposit in which they are found is situated in the valley of Gold Brook, a tributary of the Waveney. The implements occurred about twelve feet below the surface, in fresh-water deposits, filling a hollow eroded in the glacial deposit covering that part of England. This, therefore, is clearly either of post-glacial or of late glacial age.
Still another locality in which similar palæolithic implements were found in undisturbed gravel of this same age in eastern England is Icklingham, in the valley of the Lark, where the situation is quite similar to that already described at Bedford, on the Ouse.
The last place we will stop to mention in England which was visited by palæolithic man, during or soon after the Glacial epoch, is to be found in the vicinity of Southampton. At this time the Isle of Wight was joined to the mainland, and not improbably England itself to the Continent. The river, then flowing through the depression of the Solent and the Southampton Water, occupied a much higher level than now, leaving terraces along the shore at various places, in which the tools of palæolithic man have been discovered.
Though these are the best authenticated discoveries connecting man with the Glacial period in England, they are by no means the only probable cases. Almost every valley of southern England furnishes evidence of a similar but less demonstrative character.
In Cave Deposits.