This volume provides the first synthesis of the available prehistoric
and topographic information from the area of north Southwark and
Lambeth, London, in the period c.9500 cal BA to c.AD 50. The authors
consider the interplay between environmental and riverine change and
'mobile' and 'settled' human communities. They draw on recent
unpublished data as well as published work, including a Mesolithic camp
adjacent to a Late Glacial lake in Bermondsey, a burnt mound and ring
ditch with an assemblage of cremations, and preserved ploughmarks. The
book incorporates an account of the succession of the palaeoecological
environment, and the prehistory of Southwark and Lambeth is set in the
wider regional context of the Thames Valley. The thematic chapters are
supported by a gazetteer of all findspots of prehistoric material and
specialist reports on the worked flint, pottery and radiocarbon
determinations.