Nick Ashton has been a curator at the British Museum for over 30 years, specialising in Lower and Middle Palaeolithic archaeology. He helps curate the extensive stone tool collections from these periods and has directed and published major excavation projects at the Lower Palaeolithic sites of High Lodge, Barnham, Elveden and Hoxne (all in Suffolk). He is currently Co-Director of the Pathways to Ancient Britain Project funded by the Calleva Foundation. His work focuses on the earliest occupation of northern Europe, currently being investigated through fieldwork at Happisburgh (Norfolk), the early human adaptation to northern environments and the investigation of when Britain first became an island.
'[An] insightful study' Nature 'Early Humans packs in a huge amount of data, yet its research anecdotes, clear style and light humour make it accessible to a wide readership - ideal for students and researchers, but equally to be enjoyed by anyone curious about our extraordinary story on the edge of the early human world.' British Archaeology 'Well-designed ... the images and illustrations are crisp and colourful ... the professional, the amateur and the dilettante alike will find something of interest from Early Humans, and will learn a great deal about Britain's Ice Age past.' Antiquity Praise for the New Naturalist series: 'Taken either individually or as a whole, they are one of the proudest achievements of modern publishing' The Sunday Times 'The series is an amazing achievement' The Times Literary Supplement 'The books are glorious to own' Independent