The Vale of York, in North Yorkshire, has been used and shaped by
communities since the end of the last Ice Age to the modern day. Its
earliest, prehistoric features chart the way in which household groups
shifted from mobile to more sedentary forms of occupation over time,
culminating in the creation of landscape divisions from the end of the
Bronze Age, and then recognizable field systems during the Iron Age.
Throughout all periods, a variety of activity types on the landscape has
been evident in the landscape, taking significantly different forms in
different contexts: water management; the creation of boundaries;
agricultural production; structural development, from domestic houses to
larger monuments; exchange and consumption; and mortuary practices plus
other ritual activity. This volume takes a thematic approach to these
activities, revealing much about the area's development.