This book seeks to redress some of this loss. Introducing a rich variety of evidence, from pollen analysis through to deliberate deposition of human bones, Graeme Warren’s account focuses on understandings of landscape, skilled practices such as seafaring, scales of community, and the routines that constituted the fundamental rhythms of life. Other discussions include environmental and landscape change, appropriate scales and methods of analysis, and interpreting mesolithic stone tool manufacture. Written for the general reader, evening class student, undergraduate or postgraduate student and a professional audience, and including the latest research, this book offers a vivid archaeology of the distant past that can be found in some very familiar places in the Scottish landscape.
Hunter-Gatherer Ireland provides an account of what happened during the Mesolithic in Ireland, not just in terms of the subsistence acts of hunting and gathering, but by addressing the decisions made by people in the past and the changes they created and experienced. These include the nature of contact and connection within and beyond the island, the influence of hunter-gatherers on the landscapes of Ireland and, critically, the choices hunter-gatherers made about what kinds of social environments they might live in.