Wet, wooded and largely unattractive is how some have characterised
the northern Midlands in the Bronze Age. In this thesis, David
Mullin undertakes an archaeological investigation of the
ill-studied regions of Cheshire, northern Shropshire and northern
Staffordshire. Despite the paucity of work carried out to
investigate the prehistory of the area, Mullin pieces together
evidence for Bronze Age burials, lithics, settlements, the
exploitation of the landscape, metalwork and metal production. He
argues for the importance of social networks, memory and
attachments to the landscape in the Bronze Age and highlights the
potential of the area for more thorough archaeological research.
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