Dear all "Palaeolithic Scotland" reviewers on Blogspot,
May you have a happy New Year!
Please find below an important message to "Online Archaeology"
Recent analyses which I have conducted on our findings on "The Moss of Cruden" and the synergy which I found with them when I relate to when I excavated at Boxgrove is really quite profound.
I will publish this as soon as I can.
Happy New Year for 2015 to all at Online Archaeology!
Sorry for not getting back sooner but I have been back checking all of my experiences at Boxgrove with our findings from the moss of Cruden. There is an interesting anomaly which exists at both sites!
As we move, roughly; inland from "Beach" Boxgrove there is a great "dump" of flint material which I never got an explanation for when I was assisting, as an amateur; and asked the questions why? and how?!
Well, as coincidence might have it; the first time I experienced a phenomenon like this was on the "Moss of Cruden" about 4 or 5 years earlier where a great dump of flint nodules, both virgin and worked; protected our site at "Weewindae" as I called it then
(and still do) which lies in a very special basin in the Buchan countryside. The "Heap" at Boxgrove was insignificant when compared to the "Heap" at "Weewindae". There is a substatiatable conundrum forming in my mind as to the relationship of these two "Dumps" and the Palaeolithic finds which they protected and I believe that two of the most important substances which will lay this conundrum to rest are Chalk and Sand which proliferate the Boxgrove sites yet are absent on "The Moss of Cruden"
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