Prehistoric
forest arises in Cardigan Bay after storms strip away sand
Skeletal
trees of Borth forest, last alive 4,500 years ago and linked to lost
kingdom of Cantre'r Gwaelod, appear at shoreline
20
February, 2014
A
prehistoric forest, an eerie landscape including the trunks of
hundreds of oaks that died more than 4,500 years ago, has been
revealed by the ferocious storms which stripped thousands of tons of
sand from beaches in Cardigan Bay.
The
forest of Borth once stretched for miles on boggy land between Borth
and Ynyslas, before climate change and rising sea levels buried it
under layers of peat, sand and saltwater.
Scientists
have identified pine, alder, oak and birch among the stumps which are
occasionally exposed in very stormy winters, such as in 2010, when a
stretch of tree remains was revealed conveniently opposite the
visitor centre.
The
skeletal trees are said to have given rise to the local legend of a
lost kingdom, Cantre'r Gwaelod, drowned beneath the waves. The trees
stopped growing between 4,500 and 6,000 years ago, as the water level
rose and a thick blanket of peat formed.
This
year a great swath of the lost forest has been revealed. Last month
archaeologists also found a timber walkway nearby, exposed by the
storms. It was discovered by Ross Cook and Deanna Groom, from the
Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales,
who went beach walking in the wake of the storms to check for any new
finds. It was made from short lengths of coppiced branches, held in
place with upright posts.
It
has been dated to between 3,100 and 4,000 years old, built as the
local people found ways to cope with living in an increasingly
waterlogged environment.
Two
years ago human and animal footprints were found preserved in the
hardened top layer of peat, along with scatterings of burnt stones
from ancient hearths.
A
£13m coastal defence system to protect the modern village was opened
in 2012, but as the recent exposure of the spectacular prehistoric
landscape proves, the coast is still being scoured bare by storms and
flood tides.
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