Diagnostic tools used to identify the period include trapezoidal backed
blades called Cheddar points, variant forms known as Creswell points, and smaller
bladelets. Other tool types include end
scrapers made from long, straight blades. A special preparation technique was employed to remove blades from a
core through striking in a single direction, leaving a distinct 'spur' on the platform. The tools were made using a soft
hammerstone or an antler hammer. Other finds include Baltic
amber, mammoth ivory and animal teeth and bone. These were used to make harpoons, awls, beads and needles. Unusual bevelled ivory rods, known as
sagaies have been found at
Gough's Cave in
Somerset and
Kent's Cavern in
Devon. Twenty eight sites producing Cheddar points are known in England and Wales though none have so far been found in
Scotland or
Ireland, regions which it is thought were not colonised by humans until later. Most sites are caves but there is increasing evidence for open air activity and that preferred sources of flint were exploited and that tools travelled distances of up to 100 miles from their sources. Some of the flint at Gough's Cave came from the
Vale of Pewsey in
Wiltshire whilst non-local seashells and amber from the North Sea coast also indicate a highly mobile population. This matches evidence from the Magdelanian cultures elsewhere in Europe and may suggest that exchange of goods and the sending out of specialised expeditions seeking raw materials may have been practised. Analysis of
debitage at occupation sites suggests that flint nodules were reduced in size at source and the lighter blades carried by Creswellian groups as 'toolkits' in order to reduce the weight carried. Comparison of flint from Kent's Cavern and Creswell Crags has led some archaeologists to believe that they were made by the same group. Food species eaten by Creswellian hunters focused on the wild horse (
Equus ferus) or the
red deer (
Cervus elaphus), probably depending on the season, although the
Arctic hare,
reindeer,
mammoth,
Saiga antelope, wild cow, brown bear,
lynx,
Arctic fox and wolf were also exploited. Highly fragmentary fossil bones were found in
Gough's Cave at Cheddar. They had marks that suggested actions of skinning, dismembering, defleshing and marrow extraction. The excavations of 1986-1987 noted that human and animal remains were mixed, with no particular distribution or arrangement of the human bones. They also show the signs of the same treatments as the animal bones. These findings were interpreted in the sense of a nutritional
cannibalism. However, slight differences from other sites in skull treatment leave open the possibility of elements of ritual cannibalism. ==See also==