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  1. Few early Neolithic settlements have been identified in Lincolnshire; examples include a hollow at Dragonby, pottery and flint at Great Ponton, and pottery found in a later barrow at Walesby. Long barrows have been discovered in the southern and central Wolds and include the Giants' Hills barrows at Skendleby . [16]

  2. There are few visible prehistoric monuments surviving in the arable landscape and a large area of the county is covered with marine sediments. A lack of extant monuments may be one reason why Lincolnshire prehistory does not get the recognition it deserves but there are other factors.

  3. Jun 22, 2015 · The prehistoric evolution of the coastline of north-eastern Lincolnshire. The following post offers a brief look at the evolution of the coastline of north-eastern Lincolnshire and Spurn Head from the Mesolithic through until the start of the Roman era, a period that saw dramatic changes as an inland forested region was gradually flooded by the ...

  4. PREHISTORIC SETTLEMENT REMAINS, INCLUDING ENCLOSURES, PITS, TRACKWAY AND BOUNDARY DITCHES. {1}{2}{3} Complex group of rectangular and sub-cricular enclosures, ditches and pits seen on Google...

  5. May 10, 2015 · The drowned coastline, churches and settlements of the Lincolnshire, c. 1250–1600, drawn by C. R. Green after D. N. Robinson, The Book of the Lincolnshire Seaside (Buckingham, 1981), with minor modifications and the addition of selected modern settlements.

  6. The objective of this research was to examine the development of settlement in Lincolnshire during the 4th-1st millennia B.C. by a detailed investigation of two contrasting areas, the western fen margin and the Bain Valley.

  7. It is true that there have been few syntheses of Lincolnshire prehistory and none since Jeffrey May’s ‘Prehistoric Lincolnshire’ published in 1976. Research for a new volume focussing on the Bronze Age is currently underway.

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