Star Carr
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Star Carr is a Mesolithic archaeological site in Yorkshire in the United Kingdom. It is around five miles south of Scarborough.
It belongs to the early Mesolithic Maglemosian culture, evidence for which is present across the lowlands of Northern Europe, and was occupied around 8700 BC, for over 300 years. It was discovered in 1947 during the clearing of a field drain.
Star Carr's main feature is a brushwood platform which stood on the edge of a former lake. The platform would have been laid down to consolidate the boggy water's edge. Hearths found further away from the water indicate temporary settlement. It was visited seasonally by Mesolithic hunters chasing red and roe deer, elk, aurochs and wild boar. Analysis of the animal bone indicates that the site was occupied between spring and autumn. The mud of the lake has preserved items dropped into it and the hunter's tools such as flint scrapers used to clean animal skins and worked bone and antler have been found. The most striking examples are 21 perforated part skull and antlers of red deer. A fragment of a wooden oar implies that the people who occupied the site also built boats, probably coracles or simple canoes. Beads made from stone and amber suggest personal adornment. Remains of a dog are indication of the animal's domestication during this period.
The flint came from the Yorkshire Wolds further south. A type of axe, new to Britain, was made from it at Star Carr. It was sharpened during its life by simple transverse blows which made it more adaptable.
The most famous find is the top part of a stag skull, complete with antlers. The skull had two holes perforated in it and it has been suggested that it was used as a hunting disguise, or in some form of ritual.