Palaeoecological evidence for the prehistoric settlement of Bodmin Moor, Cornwall, southwest England, part 2, Land use changes from the Neolithic to the present
Br. Gearey et al., Palaeoecological evidence for the prehistoric settlement of Bodmin Moor, Cornwall, southwest England, part 2, Land use changes from the Neolithic to the present, J ARCH SCI, 27(6), 2000, pp. 493-508
Radiocarbon-dated pollen sequences from two areas of Bodmin Moor-Rough Tor
in the north-west and the East Moor-are presented and the evidence for sett
lement in the prehistoric period on the moor considered. The nature and ext
ent of human impact in the two areas are compared and the evidence for anth
ropogenic activity in the environmental record is related to that deducted
from the archaeology. A tentative model of settlement and land use from the
Neolithic to the Iron Age is proposed, with early activity in the Neolithi
c leading to a peak of settlement in the Bronze Age and continuing activity
on the moor during the Iron Age and into the Romano-British period. Human
activity may have begun in the earliest Neolithic and was possibly associat
ed with construction of the hill top enclosure at Rough Tor. The Bronze Age
peak of activity that is apparent in the archeology is also represented in
the palynological record. Activity in the Iron Age and later shows that th
e moorland was intensively used for grazing and probably hay production unt
il settlement expanded back onto the uplands in the medieval period. This l
ast phase resulted in the impoverishment of the soils and development of th
e current acid grassland and heath dominated vegetation of the moor. Finall
y, various suggestions are made for future research into the palaeoecology
of Bodmin Moor.