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Cave GeoPaleo
Discover the Caves' Archaeological Importance
Ancient Britons in the Caves
Evolution of British Man
| LOWER PALAEOLITHIC |
700,000 -75,000 ya |
European Homo erectus, Homo Heidelberg |
| MIDDLE PALAEOLITHIC |
75,000-40,000 ya |
Neandertals |
| UPPER PALAEOLITHIC |
40,000 - 10,000 ya |
Neandertals and modern man Homo sapiens |
| MESOLITHIC |
10,000-7,000 ya |
Modern man, Homo sapiens |
| NEOLITHIC |
7000-4500 ya |
New Stone Age, period begins; first evidence of farming appears;
stone axes, antler combs, pottery in common use |
| BRONZE AGE |
4500-2600 ya |
In about 2000BC construction of Stonehenge begun and from about
1500BC farms with buildings and separate walled fields are in
use across Dartmoor. A good example is at Grimspound |
| IRON AGE |
2600-2055 ya |
Iron replaces bronze. Metal coinage comes into use and widespread
contact with continental Europe begins. |
| ROMAN BRITAIN |
55BC-410AD |
Invasion of Britain by Julius Caesar |
Progression of man in Kents Cavern
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The
progression of man across the continents is thought to have taken place
during the cold periods. During the warm periods melting ice caused the
sea level to rise and oceans separated the continents. Furthermore during
warm periods food would have been easier to find. On the edge of the glacial
areas the vegetation was grassland or tundra. Tundra is a cold, treeless
area and characterised by very low temperatures, little rain or snow, a
short growing season, few nutrients, and low biological diversity. The word
tundra comes from the Finnish word tunturia, which means "treeless
plain." The area around the caves during the three ice ages would have
been tundra.
Homo Erectus
The
history of man in Britain goes back to the Lower Palaeolithic period, the
Stone Age, when homo erectus, the first hominid to migrate and survive outside
the African continent, dispersed into Asia and to the edge of Europe about
700,000 years ago. The first of the Stone Age tool makers was Australopithecus
afarensis, an ancestor of homo erectus who lived in Africa. The best known
fossils from austalopithecus were found in Ethiopia and named 'Lucy'.
Kents Cavern is the oldest recognisable human dwelling in Britain and has
some of the oldest evidence of man's occupation of Britain. Five hand axes,
made from flint, found in the caves are currently dated at 450,000 years
old. Found in the breccia along the Long Arcade and Clinnicks Gallery, deep
in the cave, hand axes were made and used by European Homo erectus, also
known as Heidelberg man nearly half a million years ago.
Heidelberg Man
Heidelberg
man was named after workers in a gravel pit discovered a jaw bone near Heidelberg
in Germany. The find consisted of a lower jaw with a receding chin and all
its teeth. While the jaw appears to be homo erectus, the teeth are smaller
than other erectus finds. The remains are estimated to be about 500,000
years old. Evidence of heidleberg man in Kents Cavern comes from large flints
worked into hand axes nearly half million years ago.
Neandertal
The
first Neandertal remains were found in the Neander valley in Germany in
1856. These bones were found to be different from modern humans. Neandertals
lived during the middle and upper palaeolithic period between 120,000 and
10,000 years ago. The tools they made are very distinctive and changed very
little during this time. Recent Neandertal artefacts from the end of the
last ice age (10,000 years ago) demonstrate workmanship associated with
modern man, homo sapiens, indicating that
the two species lived side by side. The relationship between Neandertals
and homo sapiens, ourselves, what language and social capabilities they
had and what caused them to become extinct is still a much debated issue.
Kents Cavern is rich in Neandertal flint implements indicating that this
species was well established this far north in Europe.
Homo Sapiens
The
upper palaeolithic period is associated with the evolution of modern man,
homo sapiens. The first discoveries in Europe are about 40,000 years ago
and a jaw bone with teeth found in the Vestibule Chamber in Kents Cavern,
close to the entrances used today, is 31,000 years old.
Mesolithic
The
ice age is over and the climate of Britain is pretty much the same as today.
Stone implements are attached to wooden shafts to form arrows and spears.
Bones and shells were shaped into tools. Mesolithic material is found in
Kents Cavern.
Neolithic
Neolithic (new stone age) period begins with the first evidence of farming.
Stone axes, antler combs and pottery are in common use. Flint is still the
main source of sharp cutting edges.
Bronze Age
Copper
was the first metal used by man. It could be worked into shapes by pouring
the molten metal into prepared moulds. When tin was combined with copper,
a much better material was formed, Bronze. Throughout the bronze age, trade
began to develop and man began to acquire specialised skills. Pottery, copper
casting, wood working, animal husbandry all became recognisable skills.
Farms and settlements such as the Bronze Age site at Grimspound on Dartmoor
became established.
Iron Age
Forging
copper into tools, weapons and ornaments soon led to the development of
the necessary skills to smelt iron ore into the much stronger metal, Iron.
Iron Age artefacts are numerous and include cauldrons, buckets, helmets,
shields and pins and broaches. The increasing trade links with other parts
of Europe created the need for defence and Iron Age forts. Defendable homesteads
such as the ones at Walls Hill, Torquay and Berry Head Brixham are good
examples from this period.
Roman Britain
In 55BC, Julius Caesar first sends troups to Britain, but they are forced
to retreat. First actual invasion was in 43AD.
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Animals in the Caves
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Dinosaurs
have been extinct for about 65 million years. The oldest remains of animals
found in Kents Cavern are cave bear about 500,000 years old. This period
is the lower palaeolithic period, the Old Stone Age. Man has begun to move
north into Europe from Africa. At the same time, half a million years ago,
these early bipedal hominids, walking on two legs, reached this part of
Britain.
Ancestral Cave Bear
(Ursus
deningeri)
700,000 - 10,000 ya
Shoulder Height 1.5m
Length 2.7m
Weight 250-350kg
This bear has been known about from 700,000 years ago and evolved into Ursus
spelaeus some 300,000 years ago. In Kents Cavern remains of Ursus deningeri
were found in the breccia and have been dated as old as 500,000 years. They
were mainly vegetarian and used the caves to hibernate, entering the caves
in autumn. It was not uncommon for these bears to die during hibernation,
possibly as a result of excessive exposure to water during hibernation lowering
the body temperature below the optimum level. Over the centuries this resulted
in many hundreds of bones and teeth being found in the caves. Visitors today
see a cave bear skull still embedded in the cave wall in the Water Gallery.
The complete skull of a female bear found in January 1948 and dated at 420,000 years
old is also on display.
Cave Bear
(Ursus
spelaeus)
300,000 - 10,000 ya
Shoulder Height 1.5m
Length 2.7m
Weight 330-440kg
In Kents Cavern a few specimens have been identified from about 50,000 to
20,000 years ago. This bear was much larger than the ancestral cave bear
being about twice the body weight of brown bears in Europe today. The relative
rarity of this cave bear in Britain in the last ice age shows that although
the species still occasionally ranged this far north, it had largely lost
its foothold here probably as result of the invasion of the brown bear.
Cave Lion
(Panthera
leo)
500,000 - 20,000 ya
Shoulder Height 1.4m
Length 2.5m
Weight 250-400kg
This lion was larger than its relatives in Africa today but otherwise quite
similar and is not regarded as a separate species despite the common name
"cave lion". Cave lion bones found in Kents Cavern were found
in the main cave earth and are from the middle of the last ice age between
50,000 - 20,000 years ago.
Sabre Tooth Cat
(Homotherium ladidens)
3million - 200,000 ya
Shoulder Height 1m
Length 1.7m
Weight 80-130kg
The discovery of sabre-toothed cats in Britain caused a sensation in the
last century when they were first described by Sir Richard Owen from Kents
Cavern (he called them Machairodus). Though rare, they are now known to
have lived in Europe from about 3 million years ago until their extinction,
perhaps 200,000 years ago, although there are occasional claims for much
later persistence. In Kents Cavern about half a dozen canines have been
found in the breccia, believed to be around 400,000 years but none have
been found from later periods. The sabre-toothed cat was about the size
of a present-day lion but with elongated fangs and front legs with a short
tail and a somewhat sloping back appearance.
Mammoth
(Mammuthus
primigenius)
135,000 - 11,000 ya
Shoulder Height 3 m
An ice age animal whose name mammoth is thought to come from the Russian
word "mammut" meaning "earth mole" as they believed
the animals to live underground and die on contact with the light, explaining
why they were always found dead and half-buried. Complete remains of mammoths
have been found in Siberia. In Kents Cavern mammoth remains include teeth
and leg bones likely to have been dragged into the caves by scavenging hyaenas.
Mammoths became extinct at the end of the last ice age although one theory
on mammoth extinction is that they were exposed to viruses and diseases
carried by dogs. Dogs were being used increasingly by man to hunt the beasts.
Cave Hyaena
(Crocuta
crocuta)
500,000 - 20,000 ya
Shoulder Height 1m
Length 1.7m
Weight 80-130kg
The hyaenas of the last cold stage such as those from Kents Cavern were
markedly larger than those living in Africa today. However, they were otherwise
very similar, and are not now regarded as a separate species, despite the
common name "cave hyaena". As well as their bones and teeth, fossil
droppings (coprolites) are also found. Analysis of pollen contained in these
droppings give clues to the flora (plants) that grew outside the cave at
the time. Many of the bones of other animals found in the caves are scratched
by gnaw marks from the hyaena. Hyaena not only scavenged but hunted in packs
of 10 to 25 animals, mostly at night. Their diet consisted of deer, horse,
bison, baby mammoth and woolly rhino. These animals made dens in caves where
they lived with their young.
Other Animals from the Caves
Wolf (Canis lupus)
Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes)
Woolly Rhino (Coelodonta antiquitatis) |
Discover the caves' Geological Importance
History of our Planet
| PRE-CAMBRIAN |
4600 - 570 ma |
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| PALAEOZOIC |
570 - 245 ma |
570 - 510 ma |
Cambrian |
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510 - 439 ma |
Ordovician |
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439 - 408 ma |
Silurian |
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408 - 362 ma |
Devonian -
Kents Cavern
Limestone formed |
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362 - 290 ma |
Carboniferous |
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290 - 245 ma |
Permian |
| MESOZOIC |
245 - 65 ma |
245 - 208 ma |
Triassic |
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208 - 145 ma |
Jurassic |
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145 - 65 ma |
Cretaceous |
| TERTIARY |
65 - 1.6 ma |
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Chambers and passages of Kents Cavern carved out 2 mya |
| QUATERNARY |
1.6 ma - 12,000 |
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Ice Ages |
Precambrian 4600 - 570 million years ago
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4600 million
years ago planet earth is a glowing molten cauldron of gases. During the
Pre-Cambrian period, the moon appears 4,500ma, a continental crusts takes
shape by 3,000 ma. The oldest rocks in Britain are 3,300ma found in Scotland.
Oxygen builds up and the ozone shield protecting the planet from solar radiation
is forming 2,000ma. The pre-Cambrian ends with the planets first major ice
age 700 ma and the appearance of bacteria and fungi on the planet.
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Paleozoic 570 - 245 million years ago
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570ma
Scotland was part of the North American continent and close to the equator. England
was much further south and colder. The first forms of life appear on the planet
as marine invertebrates, including trilobites. Sea levels and temperatures are
rising. The first vertebrates, animals with backbones, appear as fish by 490ma.
Over 360ma most of Britain is covered by a shallow tropical sea containing coral
reefs and other marine creatures. The Devonian limestone, which today surrounds
Kents Cavern, is being formed by these first forms of life. By 260ma the continents
are being jammed together into one large land area called Pangea allowing plants
and reptiles, evolved from the fish, to migrate across the continent. Britain
became a desert. The end of this period is marked by a mass extinction destroying
over 96 percent of the earth's marine life and three quarters of land animals.
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Mesozoic 245 - 65 million years ago
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The Mesozoic is the
age of the dinosaurs. Pangea begins to break up into separate continents creating
shallow marine habitats for species to evolve. Much of Britain is covered by sea
so dinosaur fossils are rare although sea life fossils can be found from this
period. But the period ends abruptly 65ma with the mass extinction of all dinosaurs
and three quarters of all other species. Scientists believe this to have been
caused by a massive collision with an asteroid.
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Tertiary 65 - 1.6 million years ago
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During this
period plants, insects and mammals dominate the planet. The continents as
we know them today are formed. During this period the north Atlantic is
widening with volcanic activity off the west coast of Scotland. The Alps
are formed as Africa collides with Europe. At the end of the Tertiary 2ma,
underground rivers are forming the passages and chambers in Kents Cavern.
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Quaternary 1.6 million - 12,000 years ago
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During this period
bipedal hominids, men walking on two legs, are evolving and moving out from the
African continent. Britain is being subjected to successive ice ages and warmer
interglacial periods. Homo erectus is moving into Europe and by 500,000
years ago, Homo heidelberg is using the caves at Kents Cavern as shelter.
Neandertal man lived in Europe about 200,000 years ago. Many flint tools
from Neandertals are found in Kents Cavern. Homo sapiens is in Europe about 40,000
years ago and jaw bones found in Kents Cavern show modern man was using the caves
31,000 years ago.
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Ice Age Britain
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The
passages and caves in Kents Cavern were created about 2 million years ago
by water carving its way through the 385 million year old limestone.
The period from about 1.6million years ago to 12,000 years ago is called
the Quaternary. During this period there were warm and cold periods.
The most important ice ages (cold) and interglacial (warm) periods when
ice covered Britain are listed below. The ice fields never came as far South
as Kents Cavern stopping in Somerset. Night-time temperatures were about
-10°C and day time temperatures were about +10°C during the cold
periods.
| YEARS AGO | NAME OF PERIOD | CLIMATE |
| 750,000 - 350,000 | Cromerian Interglacial | Warm |
| 350,000 - 250,000 | Anglian Glacial | Cold |
| 250,000 - 200,000 | Hoxnian Interglacial | Warm |
| 200,000 - 125,000 | Wolstonian Glacial | Cold |
| 125,000 - 72,000 | Ipswichian Interglacial | Warm |
| 72,000 - 12,000 | Devensian Glacial | Cold |
During the cold
stages, the sea levels would be much lower than today, up to 120metres lower
during a glacial maximum. At very low tides in Torbay fossilised tree trunks
can be seen, the remains of a now submerged forest giving evidence of lower
sea levels. When the sea levels were lower, animals and early man could
freely walk from France to England.
As the planet's temperature rose during the interglacial period, the sea
level would rise again as the ice fields melted, closing off the links to
the continent. Plant life would grow abundantly around the cave and warm
weather animals, particularly hippopotamus would be found in Devon. Each
successive ice age left its mark on Kents Cavern by infilling the caves
with secondary limestone deposits and sediment brought in by the flowing
underground river. Today there is no underground river in the caves. Ice
never covered Kents Cavern, neither did it cover any of Devon and Cornwall.
Significant calcite formations, stalagmites and stalactites, in the
caves only really occurred during the interglacial periods when the climate
was warm. Plant life was plentiful on the surface generating the necessary
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to give the carbonic acid the
right strength to dissolve limestone rock and deposit calcite formations
in the caves. During each warm period a new stalagmite floor would be created
in the caves, entombing bones and artefacts from previous times under the
stalagmite floor.
There they would remain until the 19th century when the first excavations
of Kents Cavern began, first by Father John MacEnery in the 1820s and then
later by William Pengelly, 1865 to 1880. It was William Pengelly who carried
out the most extensive and well documented studies of the caves.
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Geology of Kents Cavern
Devonian Limestone
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The
rock surrounding Kents Cavern is Devonian Limestone, a sedimentary rock composed
principally of Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3). In Kents Cavern the limestone
is primarily white but coloured by the minerals in the rock above. High levels
of Iron Oxide give much of the cave a reddish brown colouring, similar to the
South Devon soil. Limestone is formed in one of two ways, either with the assistance
of living organisms or by direct crystallisation.
Living Organisms
400 million years ago, this part of Southern England lay beneath the sea. The
seas were home to organisms with shell and bone structures. These are the earliest
forms of life on this planet, who extract calcium carbonate from seawater to make
their shells and bones. Mussels, oysters, limpets, winkles , whelks and coral
are all organisms doing the same today. When these organisms die, their shells
and bones settle on the sea bed and accumulate. Wave action breaks up the shells
into small pieces and over time, millions of years, these fragments harden into
limestone. The Kents Cavern limestone is hard. Chalk is another form of calcium
carbonate, but soft and formed from the shells of microscopic animals.
Direct Crystallisation
The other way limestone is formed is by direct crystallisation of water,
usually seawater. If water containing calcium carbonate is evaporated, the
calcium carbonate is left as crystals. Today this process is active in Kents
Cavern. Rain water (H2O) mixes with carbon dioxide (CO2)
in the air to form a weak carbonic acid (H2CO3). More
carbon dioxide (CO2) is absorbed when the water (H2O)
percolates through the soil, especially if the soil is rich in organic matter.
This weak carbonic acid (H2CO3) seeps down through
the limestone (CaCO3). As it does so it dissolves Limestone and
forms a calcium bicarbonate (Ca (HCO3)2) solution.The
fissures (holes) through which this solution flows get larger and after
time passages are formed allowing the water to flow faster and bring in
silt and sediment. This helps to wear away the surfaces of the passages
and eventually pebbles, rocks and boulders are washed through passages carving
ever-larger passages through the limestone.
The caves are forming. As this process creates larger caverns, the caverns
become air-filled. This will also happen when the water table drops because
of falling sea levels during cold ice age periods. The water can
now enter the roof of the caverns and does so as a calcium bicarbonate solution.
The carbon dioxide content from this solution is released to the air, leaving
behind the calcium carbonate in the form of calcite. The result is calcium
carbonate being re-formed into a variety of Calcite formations, the
most commonly known being stalagmite and stalactites we see in the caves
today. The humidity and temperature of the cave environment and the rate
of in-flow and the chemical content of the water are the main factors controlling
the rate of calcium deposition.
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Breccia
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Breccia
is another sedimentary rock that forms by cementing rock fragments, the
size of cobbles and pebbles. The rock fragments are brought into the caves
by water. The wave movement sifts the rocks into even sizes. The cementing
agent is calcite and this fills the spaces to form a solid rock. Breccia
is a cold climate material when fragments are brought down from the hill
above as a result of a freezing and thawing situation. Artefacts and bones
found in breccia are particular difficult to date because the surrounding
material can be from many periods. Surface material is bought into the caves
during a cold period. As the climate changes, a stable soil develops on
the surface, limiting the number of rock fragments entering the caves. The
flow of water is then smoother and this encourages the growth of calcite.
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Calcite Formations
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Water
seeps through the limestone and appears as a drop of water hanging from
the roof. The carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the water solution is released
into the cave atmosphere leaving a tiny ring of calcite around the water
drop. Eventually the water drop falls to the cavern floor and is replaced
by another drop on the ceiling. The process is repeated time after time
and slowly the calcite deposit grows. Good calcite formation occurs when
the climate is warm, when plant growth on the surface is producing sufficient
carbon dioxide to dissolve the limestone. During the ice ages calcite formation
is limited.
The life cycle of a stalactite formation starts when a straw is formed.
This grows into a stalactite, which can either be a conical shape
or a curtain shape or can have an irregular crystallised shape called
a helictite.
Exactly the same happens when the water drop hits the floor of the cave
where stalagmites are formed. Water flowing down the side walls of
the cave will leave a calcite deposits called flowstone looking like
a frozen water fall.
It takes about 1,000 years to grow 1 to 2 cm of calcite in Kents Cavern.
After time stalactites and stalagmites will join and form a column.
Examples of all these formations can be seen in Kents Cavern.
Straws
These very fragile cylindrical straw formations are formed on the ceiling
as water seeps out of the limestone roof of the cave. As the water drop
hangs on the roof, the carbon dioxide (CO2) content is released into the
cave air leaving a tiny ring of calcite around the water drop. Eventually
the water drop falls to the cavern floor and replaced by another on the
ceiling. The process is repeated time after time and the straw takes shape.
The uniform size of the water droplet gives the straw its almost constant
diameter.
Click
here for picture
Stalactite
If the water runs down the outside of a straw, a thicker layer of calcite
will build up as more carbon dioxide (CO2) is lost to the atmosphere of
the cave. Eventually a cone shape will begin to form called a stalactite.
These always hang from the ceiling and hold "tight" to the ceiling.
Note that stalactite is spelt with a "c" for ceiling.
Click
here for picture
Curtain or Shark's Fin
When the water runs down a sloping surface the resulting calcite deposit
forms a hanging curtain which takes the form of shark's fins. These curtain
stalactites often contain lines of colour from the differing mineral content
of the water solution.
Click
here for picture
Helictites
A rare and beautiful formation that seems to defy gravity is the helictite.
The calcite crystal growth is in all directions twisting and curving, sideways
and upwards.
Click
here for picture
Stalagmites
As the water falls from the ceiling a layer of calcite will build up on
the floor, as more carbon dioxide (CO2) is lost to the atmosphere of the
cave. When the drop rate is slow, (one drop every hour say) a straight upright
candle shape will form and where the rate is fast (one drop every second
say) then the formation will be more like a beehive. Stalagmites grow up
from the ground and "might" reach the ceiling. Note that stalagmite
is spelt with a "g" for ground.
Click
here for picture
Columns
After time, stalactites and stalagmites will join together to form columns.
The water will then continue to run down the outside and the calcite deposit
will thicken the column.
Click
here for picture
Flowstone
Flowstone is a beautiful formation that looks like a frozen waterfall. As
water flows down the walls of the cave, the calcite deposit is spread over
a large area creating a dripping candle effect. Many of the cave walls in
Kents Cavern have flowstone deposits.
Click
here for picture |
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