Over the past few decades work by the Hampshire and Wight Trust for
Maritime Archaeology has slowly been unearthing a buried archaeological
landscape in the Western Solent. Each year, as a result of erosion and
rescue excavation, the site at Bouldnor Cliff, 11m below water off the
north coast of the Isle of Wight, produces new finds including worked
wood, hearths, flint tools, food remains, twisted plant fibres and an
enigmatic assemblage of timbers dating to c8100 BP. The material
demonstrates technological abilities some 2000 years ahead of those seen
on sites in mainland Britain. This report records the events that led to
the discovery of this internationally important site, the methods used
to recover the material, and the detailed assessment of the
archaeological artefacts. It also explores the processes that have
preserved and exposed the landscape and the potential of the wider
submerged palaeo-environmental resource to aid our understanding of this
period.