Mysterious 11,000-year-old skull headdresses go on display in Cambridge
21 Jun 2018
Three 11,500-year-old deer skull headdresses excavated from a world-renowned archaeological site in Yorkshire will go on display, one for the first time, at Cambridge Universitys Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (MAA) from today.
The headdresses are the star exhibits in A Survival Story Prehistoric Life at Star Carr which gives visitors a fascinating glimpse into life in Mesolithic-era Britain following the end of the last Ice Age.
At the time people were building their homes on the shore of Lake Flixton, five miles inland from what is now the North Yorkshire coast, Britain was still attached to Europe with climates warming rapidly.
As well as the spectacular headdresses, made of red deer skull and antlers, the exhibition features other Mesolithic-era objects such as axes and weapons used to hunt a range of animals such as red deer and elk.
More:
http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/mysterious-11000-year-old-skull-headdresses-go-on-display-in-cambridge