Archaeologists are investigating
three island groups around Britain to further understanding of why, in
approximately 4,000 BC, humans altered their lifestyle from hunting and
gathering to farming the land.
Some scholars believe that this change
occurred due to colonists from the continent moving into Britain,
bringing farming and pottery-making skills with them, but others argue
that the indigenous population of Britain adopted this new lifestyle
gradually on their own terms.
To shed new light on the debate, archaeologists at the at the University of Liverpool,
in collaboration with the University of Southampton, are excavating
three island groups in the western seaways and producing oceanographic
models to understand what sailing across this area would have been like
in 4,000 BC. The team will also construct a database of 5th and 4th
millennium occupation sites.
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