Prehistoric Gower
Writer Iain Sinclair seeks the UK's oldest burial site on Gower's cliffs. His psychogeographic companions are Helen Mark, archaeologist Ffion Reynolds and bookseller Jeff Towns.
Writer Iain Sinclair seeks the UK's oldest burial site in a cave along south Gower's windy clifftops. The 'Red Lady of Paviland' was interred in a cave 26,000 years ago, the bones decorated with red ochre. But, as he tells Helen Mark, "she" was in fact a he, buried with jewellery and alongside a mammoth's skull. This was at a time when the Bristol Channel was a tundra landscape.
Best known for his psychogeographic journeyings through unloved modern landscapes and wastelands, such as the M25 perimeter, Sinclair explains to Helen why he's drawn back to the ancient past in this part of south Wales, a place of childhood holidays, and the subject of his latest book, 'Black Apples of Gower'.
He's joined by archaeologist Ffion Reynolds, who's a specialist in prehistoric sites, and antiquarian bookseller Jeff Towns.
Producer: Mark Smalley.
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- Thu 19 Nov 2015 15:00大象传媒 Radio 4
- Sat 21 Nov 2015 06:07大象传媒 Radio 4
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Open Country
Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of Britain