Paleolithic site

Eartham Pit

United Kingdom Boxgrove Site of Special Scientific Interest
Eartham Pit
Eartham Pit · Wikipedia

About

The Boxgrove Palaeolithic site is a complex of internationally important Lower Palaeolithic archaeological sites in the former Eartham Quarry, north-east of Boxgrove in West Sussex, dating to around 480,000 years ago during the Middle Pleistocene. The oldest human remains in Britain, designated "Boxgrove Man", have been recovered from the site, possibly attributable to Homo heidelbergensis. Boxgrove is also one of the oldest sites in Europe with direct evidence of hunting and butchering by early humans.

Only part of the site is protected through designation, one area being a 9.8-hectare (24-acre) geological Site of Special Scientific Interest, as well as a Geological Conservation Review site. Other key Lower Paleolithic sites in the UK include the Happisburgh footprints (the oldest evidence of humans in Britain), Kents Cavern, and Swanscombe. The site is close to a fossil shoreline and has a interglacial, temperate climate fauna in deposited in sediments representing initially coastal marine, transitioning upwards into coastal mudflat and later grassland and woodland environments.

The site was discovered by Andrew Woodcock and Roy Shephard-Thorn in 1974. They recorded the geological...