Star Carr

The richest Mesolithic site in Britain, a few miles south of Scarborough, on the edge of the ancient Lake Pickering, only 30 km from Farndale

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Directions

As you drive south from Scarborough on the A64, you pass through Seamer and then pass Herdborough House Farm. A little further on that road, on the left (east) side, there is a potato farm at Star Carr. It is easy enough to park your car there, close to the point where the River Hertford crosses under the road. You can then walk up the line of the canal-like River Hertford for about a kilometre to a bridge. The field on the other side of the river is the site of excavation of Starr Carr, the best preserved Mesolithic site in Britain.

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There is not much to see now. You will find yourself looking across to an arable field where perhaps a tractor might follow its parallel paths. However if you take some time to understand the community that lived here, at the edge of an ancient lake, about nine thousand years ago, you might allow your imagination to see through the mists of time to a different world.

Perhaps before visiting the site at Star Carr, or afterwards as takes your fancy, you should visit the exhibition of artefacts at Scarborough Museum or the Yorkshire Museum in York.

 

Neolithic Lake People

The first people appear to have settled in the area of the North Yorkshire Moors about 10,000 years ago. They were hunters, hunting wild animals in the forests that covered the moors. On the North York Moors relics of early hunting, gathering and fishing communities have been found as a widespread scattering of flint tools and the barbed flint flakes used in arrows and spears. The earliest known evidence of human presence in the area of the Vale of Pickering dates back to the Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) period. During the 5,000 years following the arrival of the first migrants the climate improved steadily and a richer natural vegetation started to cover the land including birch, hazel, elm, pine and oak trees.

The last glaciation had left a series of smaller lakes and meres and a vast deposit of mud on the bed of Lake Pickering as the river Derwent, rushing through Kirkdale Gorge, drained the Vale. Around the meres life had once abounded, reed swamps fringed the shores and aquatic plant life grew in profusion. The higher land was densely forested by birch willow and later hazel as the climate warmed.

In 1947 John Moore of the Scarborough and District Archaeological Society discovered flints which in turn led to excavations by Professor J G D Clark near Flixton at Star Carr. On the eastern fringe of the long lost Lake Pickering, long after the larger waters had drained away and the area had become productive agricultural land, he discovered the remains of human occupation dating to 9,000 YBP beneath the pasture. He excavated in the peat where once a lake shore had been and named the area Lake Flixton. There he found a platform of felled beech trees and on it some 16,000 pieces of flint, stone and amber beads, worked bone, antler points, implements and numerous bones of animals which had been hunted for food and for their skins.

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Star Carr near Seamer south of Scarborough in the area called The Carrs is the most important settlement discovered from this period. Due to waterlogged conditions, a considerable quantity of organic remains, as well as flint tools, have survived. This is Britain’s best known Mesolithic site. The site, on the eastern shores of the ancient glacial Lake Pickering, was surrounded by birch trees, some of which had been cleared and used to construct a rough platform of branches and brushwood. Lumps of turf and stones had been thrown on top of this construction to make a village site. The site was probably visited from time to time by about four or five families who were engaged in hunting, fishing and gathering wild plants as well as manufacturing tools and weapons and working skins for clothes.

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The Mesolithic group which settled at Star Carr lived in tents made from animal skins which were erected on wooden platforms around the edge of a large ice-dammed lake.

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The site was occupied during the early Mesolithic archaeological period, contemporary with the preboreal and boreal climatic periods. Though the ice age had ended and temperatures were close to modern averages, sea levels had not yet risen sufficiently to separate Britain from continental Europe.

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Amongst the finds were twenty one red deer stag skull caps which may have been head-dresses and nearly two hundred projectile, or harpoon, points made of red deer antler. These organic materials were preserved in waterlogged peat. Normally all that remains on Mesolithic sites are stone tools.

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The first settlers in Star Carr built a camp within the birch forest, close to the lake on a peninsula, with willow and aspen trees along the shore. The settlement continued in constant use for two or three hundred years. A large number of worked flints have been recovered in the area showing a variety of different tools were produced. They would have been used for wood and antler working, hide processing, for cutting and working plant material, and for butchering animals.

A shore side platform was perhaps used in the form of a landing stage between water and shore. The canoes, paddles, spears, harpoons, mattock handles, and bows and arrows, were all fashioned in wood. Hunting took place away from the settlement, sometimes by boat and involved a wide range of animals. Aurochs and deer were largely hunted in woodland, or by the water when they came to drink. Beavers would have been hunted around the lake. Family groups would roam the countryside collecting nuts, edible plants, fruit, and gathering raw materials for the manufacturer of artefacts such as baskets.

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Star Carr people might have travelled fifteen miles to gather suitable flintstones from the coast, often walking through dense birch woodland. The camp site would have been buzzing with the noise of flintstones being knapped, arrows tipped and fletched and bows painstakingly fashioned into weapons.

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Burnt stones have revealed where groups of families sat about a fire to cook, share food and tell stories.

This was a place where people would have experienced familiarity through their senses. This would have been a damp and swampy region with strong pungent smells from the water side reeds, the cooking food, from freshly killed game being gutted and skinned and from the aroma of skins curing and of the leather and heavy woven clothing being worn.

 

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