Members of the Homo genus have intermittently …

Years: 7821BCE - 7678BCE

Members of the Homo genus have intermittently inhabited Britain for hundreds of thousands of years; Homo sapiens have done so for tens of thousands.

DNA analysis has shown that modern humans arrived in Britain before the last ice age but retreated to Southern Europe when much of Britain was ice covered, with the remainder being tundra.

At this time, the sea level was about one hundred and twenty-seven meters (four hundred and seventeen feet) lower than it is today, joining Britain to Ireland and the area known as Doggerland to the continent of Europe.

Britain had been reoccupied by 12,000 BCE as shown by archaeology.

The climate from twelve thousand seven hundred to eleven thousand five hundred years ago, in what is known as the Younger Dryas period, became cooler and dryer.

Food animal populations seem to have declined although woodland coverage has expanded.

Tool manufacture in the Final Upper Paleolithic revolved around smaller flints but bone and antler work became less common.

Typically, there are parallel-sided flint blades known as "Cheddar Points.” However, the number of known sites is much larger than before and more widely spread.

Many more open-air sites are known such as that at Hengistbury Head.

The ice age finally ends around 8000 BCE and the Holocene era begins.

Temperatures rise, probably to levels similar to those today, and forests further expand.

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