Skip to content

Toggle service links

CEPSAR Lecture

The Early Human Occupation of Britain

Prof Chris Stringer
This event took place on 22nd January 2007 at 4:00pm (16:00 GMT)
Berrill Lecture Theatre, The Open University, Walton Hall Campus, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
Humans have probably been in Europe for over a million years, but until recently it was believed that they only colonised northern Europe in the last 500,000 years. Until recently it was also generally believed that the Pleistocene human occupation of Britain was near continuous from at least 400,000 years ago.However, new research suggests that instead, there were repeated colonization events, followed by local extinctions, and recolonisations. The unique palaeogeographic position of Britain meant that periods of low sea level with the maximum extent of land connection with continental Europe were also the least hospitable due to climatic deterioration, while the establishment of the English Channel during the Middle Pleistocene meant that at times of climatic optima, Britain became an island, isolating existing inhabitants, or preventing the arrival of new ones. The Ancient Human Occupation of Britain project is a collaborative enterprise between archaeologists, palaeontologists and geologists to reconstruct the pattern of early colonisations, and investigate the factors controlling these. Approaches include excavation, faunal and archaeological collections research, stratigraphic and chronometric studies, and isotope analyses. Project results include evidence that Britain was colonised at least 700,000 years ago, and that there was population decline during later Middle Pleistocene interglacials, culminating in complete human absence during
the last interglacial.

The webcast was open to 400 users

Click below to play the event (60 minutes)