The name originates from the
Danish archeological site
Maglemose, situated near
Gørlev and
Høng on western
Zealand, southwest of lake
Tissø. Here the first settlement of the culture was excavated in 1900, by George Sarauw. During the following century a long series of similar settlements were excavated from
England to
Poland and from
Skåne in
Sweden to northern
France. When the Maglemosian culture flourished, sea levels were much lower than now and what is now mainland Europe and Scandinavia were linked with Britain through the region known as
Doggerland, now submerged beneath the
North Sea. The cultural period overlaps the end of the
last ice age, when the ice retreated and the glaciers melted. It was a long process and sea levels in
Northern Europe did not reach current levels until almost 6000 BC, by which time they had inundated large territories previously inhabited by Maglemosian people. Therefore, there is hope that the emerging discipline of
underwater archaeology may reveal interesting findings related to the Maglemosian culture in the future. ==Characteristics==