There are a number of interesting ideas in that article, including
The long-extinct wildlife dates the flints back to a much warmer period when Britain was still connected to continental Europe via a land bridge.
I suppose critics of the global warming concern would point to that and say 'see, the earth has been warmer in the past! What's the big deal?"
Well of course, the earth is now different and the consequences of a warmer environment will be signifcantly different. We have a lot less forested areas to buffer the weather. Coastal communities could be more a risk for storms (e.g. Katrina and Rita). We are heavily dependent on a reliable food supply, which could be threatened by more energetic or wet weather. Insects like mosquitoes, which carry a variety of harmful diseases, could pose an increased threat to the human population.
Interestingly, even with the warmer weather, with presumably higher sea level (?), there was a land bridge between England and continental Europe.
Anyway, the dating issue is interesting.
The stone tools were dated using various lines of evidence, including the bones of an extinct species of prehistoric water vole called Mimomys. Human artifacts have never before been found with the remains of this small mammal, the researchers say
Ancient snails were also used to date the Stone Age cache through a method called amino acid geochronology. The technique measures the extent of protein breakdown in animal matter to gauge how old it is.
Amino acid geochronolgy -
http://www.geo.umass.edu/amino/aalintro.htmlhttp://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~dsk5/AAGL/http://www.geol.vt.edu/research/gssrs/gssrs2001/abstracts/carroll.pdfor just google on "Amino acid geochronolgy"