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|
Interior view of the public pit at Grime's Graves | |
| Location | |
|---|---|
| Location | Lynford,Norfolk,England |
| Coordinates | 52°28′33″N0°40′31″E / 52.47585°N 0.67541°E /52.47585; 0.67541 |
| Production | |
| Products | Flint tools |
| History | |
| Opened | c. 2600 BC |
| Closed | c. 2300 BC |
| Owner | |
| Company | Managed byEnglish Heritage |
Grime's Graves is a largeNeolithicflint mining complex inNorfolk, England. It lies 8 km (5.0 mi) north east fromBrandon, Suffolk in theEast of England. It was worked betweenc. 2600 andc. 2300 BC, although production may have continued through theBronze andIron Ages and later, owing to the low cost offlint compared with metals. Flint was much in demand for making polished stone axes in the Neolithic period. Much later, when flint had been replaced by metal tools, flintnodules were in demand for other uses, such as for building and as strikers formuskets.
Grime's Graves was first extensively explored by the 19th-century archaeologistWilliam Greenwell.
Thescheduled monument[1] extends over an area of some 37 ha (91 acres) and consists of at least 433 shafts dug into the naturalchalk to reach seams of flint. The largest shafts are more than 14 m (46 ft) deep and 12 m (39 ft) in diameter at the surface. It has been calculated that more than 2,000 tonnes of chalk had to be removed from the larger shafts, taking 20 men around five months, before stone of sufficient quality was reached. An upper 'topstone' and middle 'wallstone' seam of flint was dug through on the way to the deeper third 'floorstone' seam which most interested the miners. The site is managed byEnglish Heritage and can be visited.
The site is also a biological and geologicalSite of Special Scientific Interest[2] and aGeological Conservation Review site.[3] It is part of theBrecklandSpecial Area of Conservation[4] andSpecial Protection Area.[5]

In order to remove the chalk efficiently, the ancient miners built wooden platforms and ladders as they dug downwards and piled the spoil around the shaft opening using turf revetments to hold it in place for the season, after which the shaft and all its galleries were thoroughly and fastidiously backfilled to promote stability. The landscape around Grime's Graves has a characteristic pockmarked appearance caused by the infilled shafts. This is probably what inspired the laterAnglo-Saxon inhabitants of the area to name it after their godGrim (literally the masked, or hooded one, a euphemism forWoden). Although the pagan Anglo-Saxons seem to have had some idea of what the site was, as the name of the site means literally "the masked one's quarries" (or Grim's Graben), it was not until CanonWilliam Greenwell excavated one of the shafts in 1868–1870 that their purpose was discovered in modern times. Similar sites have been found elsewhere in Europe, such asCissbury inWest Sussex,Krzemionki inPoland, andSpiennes inBelgium.

The miners usedpicks fashioned from the antler ofred deer. They probably used wooden shovels, although this is only inferred by analogy with other flint mines with better conditions for the preservation of artefacts. Analysis of the antlers (Clutton-Brock 1984: 25) has shown that the miners were mainly right-handed and favoured the left antlers out of those that were naturally shed seasonally by the deer. The 28 pits excavated up to 2008 yielded an average of 142.5 antler picks each, of which an average of 14.8 have been found to be left-handed.
Once they had reached the floorstone flint, the miners dug lateral galleries outwards from the bottom, following the flint seam. The medium-depth shafts yielded as much as 60 tons of flintnodules, which were brought to the surface and roughly worked into shape on site. Theblank tools were then possibly traded elsewhere for final polishing. It is estimated that 60 tons of flint could have produced as many as 10,000 of the polishedstone axes, which were the mines' main product. Extrapolation across the site suggests that Grime's Graves may have produced around 16–18,000 tonnes of flint across the 433 shafts recorded to date. However, there are large areas of the site covered by later activity which are believed to conceal many more mineshafts.
There were other hard stones used for axe manufacture, those of theLangdale axe industry andPenmaenmawr inNorth Wales being traded across Europe, as well as other less well-known igneous and metamorphic rocks. The axes were much in demand for forest clearance and settlement, development of farmland for arable crops and raising animals, which characterises the Neolithic period.

One unproductive shaft (pit 15) appears to have been turned into a shrine. Analtar of flint lumps had been built with a chalk bowl at its base and antler picks piled around. In front of the altar had been placed aVenus figurine of chalk, a chalk phallus and some balls, also of chalk. It may have been an attempt to ensure that the mine remained productive or 'fertile' after this particular shaft turned out to have little flint in it. However, it is possible that the Venus figurine and the phallus are modern fakes – there is a lack of primary evidence surrounding their recovery in 1939, and rumours circulated at the time of the excavation that they were planted in order to deceive Leslie Armstrong, the archaeologist overseeing the dig.[6]

Such a large industry may have required supporting infrastructure. Assuming no more than two shafts were open at any one time, around 120 red deer may have needed to be bred and managed nearby, in order to provide a steady supply of antler as well as skin, food and other products that the miners would require. Alternatively, the mines may have been worked intermittently by local farmers, as happened in many early metal mines during theBronze Age and the laterIron Age.
Earlier flint mines in Britain, such as Cissbury in West Sussex, were just as important as Grime's Graves, and there were many very local sources of flint which were exploited on thedownlands. However, it is probably relevant that Grime's Graves were close to the very rich soils ofthe Fens, and forest clearance here would rely on local products.
There was also extensive farming settlement during the Bronze Age, known frommiddens that infill the mouths of many Neolithic mineshafts. Animal bones from these middens show that the Bronze Age people kept cattle, which they milked, sheep and a few pigs. They also grew barley, wheat and peas.
Grime's Graves was first extensively explored by the archaeologistWilliam Greenwell in 1868. The function of the holes in the ground around it was not known in the time between the mine's abandonment and his exploration of it. An 18th-century priest suggested that the holes were left by Vikings, and an amateur archeologist suggested a century later that they were the remains of a fortress of theCelts.[7]
Grime's Graves is in the care ofEnglish Heritage. It is open to the public and it is possible to descend a 9 m (30 ft) ladder and explore one of the shafts. There is a small exhibition area.[8] This is the only shaft of its kind open to the public in Britain.
The full English Heritage reports on the excavations at Grime's Graves in 1971–72[9][10] are now available online through theArchaeology Data Service. DoctorPhilip Harding FSA, later to appear in the TV programmeTime Team, dug the site each summer from 1972 to 1976.