Unidentified photographer / artist, 1859, 27 April, Two workmen in the gravel pit near the Seminary of St Acheul, 27 April 1859. The standing workman is pointing to the in situ flint, Albumen print, Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole, LL/36444
Unidentified photographer / artist 1859, 27 April Two workmen in the gravel pit near the Seminary of St Acheul, 27 April 1859. The standing workman is pointing to the in situ flint
Albumen print Bibliothèques d'Amiens Métropole This is the first use of photography to support claims for prehistoric evidence and captures the moment that human antiquity was established.
On 27 April 1859 Joseph Prestwich and John Evans recovered a flint implement that lay 17 feet below the ground surface in context with the bones of extinct animals such as the mammoth and the woolly rhino in the quarries at St Acheul. They were accompanied by three representatives of the Société des Antiquaries de Picardie (Pinsard, Dufour and Garnier) to witness its discovery, and for a photographer to record the moment. The significance of the find was enormous and was presented to the Royal Society on May 26th 1859. This discovery had been demonstrated by Jacques Boucher de Perthes earlier but little trust was given to his theories but with Prestwich and Evans the evidence was accepted and it proved that man had existed in geological time.