A Link With the Past
Historical, misc, tools March 10th, 2010Last Sunday, I took a break from the woods and went fossil hunting. The area I went to was Walton-on-the-Naze in Essex, which is about an hour away from where I live.
I’ve never been fossil hunting, but a friend who I went with has been a couple of times, so told me what to look for and roughly where to look.
At the top of the Naze, I was taken aback by the erosion of the cliff tops. Apparently, this is happening at a rate of 2 meters per year.
The Hanoverian Tower – or Naze Tower, was built as a sea mark in 1720 and was the forerunner to the popular lighthouses of a later era. This tower will follow the world war two pill boxes and fall onto the beach in 50 years time if the area isn’t protected soon.
The cliffs are made up of a complex mixture of different geologies. If you want more info go here for a detailed explanation, but briefly there are three layers: The top layer is sand and gravel from the Pleistocene epoch, a Red Crag formation from the Pliocene and the bottom layer, which is a strange black sticky clay called London Clay from the Eocene period.
We were looking for bivalve valves and gastropods in the Red crag and anything from Shark’s teeth to wood fossils at the foot of the cliffs in amongst the London clay and on the partly shingle beach front.
It wasn’t that far removed from tracking as I ended up on the damp shingle, on my hands and knees searching for micro signs and getting “tracked out” as I searched for unseen clues.
And this was the haul:
Firstly, 4 Shark teeth identified by the highly knowledgeable Nazeman himself, Mike Todd, who runs a small store as part of an education project. These teeth are from Striatolamia macrota (7 gilled sand-shark) from the Eocene period – 53.7 million years old. I know this exact detail because these were found on Mike’s table at the top of the Naze! In other words, I got them from him because I failed to find any myself!!
Next up is some fossilised twig preserved as iron pyrite. I found this myself!
The piece de resistance for me was finding this piece of flint. I found it right up against foot of the cliff, in a puddle of water running off the London clay. Even though I didn’t get a chance to show it to Mike, I’m more than 90% sure that this has been knapped. I went on Mike’s website and confirmed that Neolithic knapped flint has been found in the area in the form of hand-axes and blades.
Another pointer is the brown/bronze colour of the flint. I’ve knapped this sort of flint before with the legendary John Lord. It almost certainly comes from Grimes Graves Neolithic flint mine in Thetford, Norfolk, which isn’t a million miles away from where I found this.
The final confirmation will be to send a picture to Mike and see what he makes of it.
I have little doubt that I am the first human to touch this tool since the last user either dropped and lost it it or otherwise discarded it possibly between 7,000 and 11,000 years ago. That fact makes this an incredibly special find for me, possibly more so than finding a much older shark’s tooth (if I had found one that is). It provides me with a strangely personal, physical link with the prehistoric past that i can’t explain. It’s no wonder people get heavily involved in fossil hunting.
The full haul is shown in this picture with a one pound coin (2cms –0.8in dia) for scale. On the left is (I think) Coprolite (fossilised scat) and the item with a hole may well be a part of a fossilised sea-sponge. The rest are fossilised twigs. I think the white shells are quite modern and should really be discarded.
I thoroughly enjoyed the day and I will most certainly be going back in the near future to have another fossil hunt.
Thanks for the visit.






March 10th, 2010 at 7:02 pm
Blimey, that’s fascinating! What a great find and what a great way to spend a few hours. That flint er, thing is incredible.
If the edge of Essex is eroding at 2 metres per year how long will it take to get to Romford?
March 10th, 2010 at 11:44 pm
Ah yes well spotted. What was your name? Err… Couple of years I reckon. The flint thing is probably a blade. Forerunner to a … sharper blade.
March 11th, 2010 at 2:23 am
That little flint blade is definatly a worked bit. to me it looks as it was knocked off a core or picked up from a midden and roughed out with a couple of taps and then used to bore/ream a hole or divot in bone or antler? held in the hand with a twisting motion making the little random pressure chips to both faces.Just my guess. Great finds!
Take care and keep up the great work.
March 11th, 2010 at 3:06 am
Dam good post Pablo, fascinating. I had a rock and fossil collection before I left England, but when I went back, with the intention of taking some major pieces back with me, the collection was gone. I find archaeology fascinating stuff.
Sad to think that the tower may fall into the sea, nothing short of criminal neglegence if the local council does nothing to stabelise thos cliffs. Maybe more public pressure would help?
March 11th, 2010 at 6:22 am
….. I’ll raise you a 99.9% confidence in it being a tool of some sort. I’m no expert but I find quite a few of them were I am and have had one or two ID lessons from various “ologists” on what to look for.
On the second picture down you can see the bulb of percussion (a convex bulge – google and you will see what I mean) with ripples extending away from the striking platform (sometimes called the anvil point). This shows that the flake was struck quite precisely at a predetermined spot and is unlikely to have happened naturally (although this is a bone of contention with some geologists!).
Well done – good find!
March 11th, 2010 at 9:00 pm
Pablo
I’ve always wanted to go there myself, shame you didn’t find a shark tooth, but that’s just a really good reason to go back for another try.
SBW
March 17th, 2010 at 2:50 pm
what a woderful job you are doing .i am very impressed.love magret
March 17th, 2010 at 6:05 pm
Thanks everyone – particularly Magret.
March 18th, 2010 at 5:51 pm
This is an interesting site, too bad I can not so good english