This eagerly awaited volume documents the evidence for human activity in
the Colne valley at Three Ways Wharf, Uxbridge in the Lateglacial and
Early Mesolithic periods. A series of five in situ lithic and faunal
scatters, centred on hearth settings on local high points within the
valley floor, belong to two main phases of hunter-gatherer activity. The
earlier phase, characterised by Lateglacial bruised-edge 'long blades'
of the north German Ahrensburgian technocomplex, associated with
reindeer and horse, is dated to c 10,000 BP. The succeeding Early
Mesolithic phase is typified by broad, obliquely backed flint points,
associated with a fauna dominated by red and roe deer, and dated some
800 radiocarbon years later at c 9200 BP. Detailed analyses of the
important faunal and lithic assemblages, bolstered by an extensive
refitting programme, have been fully integrated to provide new and
striking behavioural explanations. These hunter-gatherer groups can now
be seen as groups of people intent on pursuing their own independent and
socially defined goals, and no longer solely in terms of their adaptive
responses to environmental pressures. Three Ways Wharf will come to take
its place alongside other iconic sites of the period such as Star Carr,
Broxbourne and Thatcham.