- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Stone tool, pointed hand axe
- Long description
- 'A quartzite handaxe made from a struck flake or split pebble. The handaxe is bifacially worked, although there are very few secondary flake removals. In profile it is slightly plano-convex. .' (From page 76 of The Wolvercote Channel Handaxe Assemblage: A Comparative Study, by Joyce A. Tyldesley (BAR British Series 153), Oxford: B.A.R. (1986).) [AS 20/07/2011; JC 15 1 2015]
- Geographical reference
- England Oxfordshire Oxford Wolvercote Wolvercote Brick Pit
- Person
- Maker Unknown Maker
- Field collector Alexander James Montgomerie Bell
- PRM source Archibald Colquhoun Bell
- Date / Period
- Archaeological period: Lower Palaeolithic Acheulian
- Date collected
- By 1920
- Acquisition information
- Purchased: 1920
- Materials and processes
- Material Quartzite Stone, Process Flaked
- Dimensions
- Width: max 90 mm, Length: max 120 mm, Weight 260 g
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1921.91.473.33
- Research and responses
In 1894 Alexander James Montgomerie Bell published two articles about Palaeolithic remains from Wolvercote in volume 30 of the journal Antiquary. Full references: Bell, A.M. 1894. 'Palaeolithic Remains at Wolvercote, Oxfordshire'. Antiquary 30: 148 - 152. and Bell, A.M. 1894. 'Palaeolithic Remains at Wolvercote, Oxfordshire, No. II'. Antiquary 30: 192 - 198. [MN 05/06/2009]
In 1900 a third paper was published by Bell updating his discoveries at the site. Full Reference: Bell, A.M. 1900. 'On the Occurrence of Flint Implements of Palaeolithic Type on an Old Land-Surface in Oxfordshire, Near Wolvercote and Pear-Tree Hill, Together with a Few Implements of Various Plateau Types' The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 50: 81. This paper can be accessed online through JSTOR. The stable URL is http://www.jstor.org/stable/2842715. [MN 05/06/2009]
A. M. Bells most detailed publication on the Wolvercote deposits was published in 1904 in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society. Full reference: Bell, A.M. 1904. 'Implementiferous Sections at Wolvercote (Oxfordshire)'. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society 60: 120-132. This paper can be accessed online through the Geological Societies Lyell Collection. The URL is http://jgslegacy.lyellcollection.org/cgi/content/abstract/60/1-4/120. [MN 05/06/2009]
The Oxford University Museum of Natural History also holds a considerable number of geological specimens collected by Bell from Wolvercote, see: Q.00285 - Q.00378, Q.00829 - Q.00909 and Q.01758 - Q.01763. The OUMNH catalogue can be accessed online at http://www.oum.ox.ac.uk/database/geology/pleicene.htm. [MN 05/06/2009]
The Wolvercote Brick Pit [SP 4977 1043, now a lake] from which this object was recovered is recorded on the English Heritage maintained National Monuments Record under monument no. 336734. This record can be accessed online at http://pastscape.english-heritage.org.uk/hob.aspx?hob_id=336734. [MN 05/06/2009]
This object was studied by Hyeong Woo Lee as part of his doctoral dissertation submitted in 2000, entitled A Study of Lower Palaeolithic Stone Artefacts from Selected Sites in the Upper and Middle Thames Valley, with Particular Reference to the R.J.MacRae Collection. Lee numbered each object according to his own system, with objects labelled with a small, round red sticker. This sticker was removed when numbered. This tool was numbered by Lee '19' [AS 03/02/2011].
This object was examined by Joyce Tyldesley for her PhD published with B.A.R. in 1986. See publications list below. [AS 21/07/2011]
Thirty-four handaxes from Wolvercote in the PRM's collections formed one of the datasets discussed in 'A Re-Examination of Variability in Handaxe Form in the British Palaeolithic', by Kate Emery (London: University College London, Ph.D. thesis, 2010). (Available online at http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/19299/1/19299.pdf .) [JC 5 5 2017]
- Associated publications
- Described on page 76 and illustrated (Figure 2.79) on page 77 of The Wolvercote Channel Handaxe Assemblage: A Comparative Study, by Joyce A. Tyldesley (BAR British Series 153), Oxford: B.A.R. (1986). Tyldesley writes (page 76): '(79) Figure 2.79* (Pitt Rivers Museum) "Wolvercote, Oxon. Riverbed" is written on the implement. L 110mm, B 77mm, T 35mm W 270g. A quartzite handaxe made from a struck flake or split pebble. The handaxe is bifacially worked, although there are very few secondary flake removals. In profile it is slightly plano-convex. Patches of the original pebble surface are visible on one face.' [AS 19/07/2011; JC 15 1 2015]
Further items to explore
1884.138.5.76Ceramic sherd1884.138.5.76
1938.35.486'Strike a light' flint, square with rounded corners and triangular section. Dark grey in colour with white mineral accretion. [BS [OPS move] 31/8/2017]1938.35.486
1884.137.60.30Ceramic sherd1884.137.60.30
1985.51.18Rectangular silver votive offering, with repoussé decoration in the shape of a man standing with a dog. [SM 07/01/2011]1985.51.18