1,167 results on '"early neolithic"'
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2. Life cycles of Early and Late Neolithic pottery in the Central Balkans: Use and secondary use vs. typology
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Svilar, Marija and Vuković, Jasna
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- 2025
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3. Woodland around Early Neolithic settlement in the Carpathian Foothills. A charcoal analysis from Biskupice site 18 (southern Poland)
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Moskal-del Hoyo, Magdalena, Korczyńska-Cappenberg, Marta, and Głód, Anna
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- 2025
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4. Rare insights into ceramic biographies: Remarkable pottery finds from linear pottery wells in Central Germany
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Schell, Frank and Stäuble, Harald
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- 2025
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5. What ceramic can tell us about the (after)life of an LBK house. The example of an LBK settlement with preserved occupation layer
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Kreienbrink, Frauke
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- 2025
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6. Plant remains from the Linear Pottery Culture settlement at sites Modlniczka 3 and 4, Kraków district. New sources for understanding agriculture in the Early Neolithic in southern Poland.
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Magda Dagmara Kapcia and Maciej Nowak
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linear pottery culture ,macroscopic plant remains ,hazelnut shells ,early neolithic ,Paleontology ,QE701-760 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
The aim of the archaeobotanical research of plant macro remains assemblage from the Early Neolithic settlement at Modlniczka in southern Poland is to study plants (fruit and seeds), cultivated and wild species used by the oldest farming groups during the early phase of occupation at the sites. The results were obtained from 62 samples from two archaeological sites, Modlniczka sites 3 and 4, likely forming one large settlement. Only charred plant remains were taken into account. Among cultivated plants, two species of hulled wheat, Triticum dicoccon and Triticum monococcum , and common barley Hordeum vulgare were documented. Among wild plants, several taxa were found, including Chenopodium t. album , Ch. polyspermum , Fallopia convolvulus , Bromus sp. Numerous seeds of Chenopodium t. album indicates that this plant could have been used as part of a diet. In addition, hazelnut ( Corylus avellana ) shells were found.
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- 2024
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7. Bone Powder and Wild Plants: Subsistence Strategies of Early Neolithic Settlers in North China.
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Wei, Xingtao, Sun, Yibin, Li, Jindou, Zhang, Xiaohu, Sun, Yongge, and Cui, Tianxing
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HUNTER-gatherer societies , *WILD plants , *X-ray diffraction , *SEDENTARY lifestyles , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
ABSTRACT The transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture is a major turning point in human history. In North China, although crops were cultivated as early as 10,000 BP, they only became staple foods with the establishment of a fully functional agricultural system between 6000 and 5000 BP. Thus, exploring the subsistence strategies of this transitional period is crucial for understanding how hunter‐gatherers gradually evolved into farmers. The Peiligang culture (
c . 9000–7000 BP) is one of the most significant early Neolithic cultures in this region. In this study, we investigated the crust residues from the potteryDing ‐tripods (鼎) dating to the middle Peiligang culture (8800–8200 cal bp) at the Xielaozhuang site using a multidisciplinary approach that includes FTIR, XRD, SEM‐EDS, and starch granule analyses. Our results indicate that a mixture containing bone powder, Panicoideae, Triticeae, and acorns was prepared in these potteryDing ‐tripods. This finding represents one of the earliest known uses of bone powder globally, contributing valuable insights to the ongoing debate regarding fragmented bone assemblages and bone grease extraction. Moreover, combined with macrobotanical and zooarchaeological data, our findings suggest that agriculture had not yet fully supplanted hunting and gathering, as wild plants and animals continued to play a critical role in the diet at the Xielaozhuang site during the Peiligang culture. The use of bone powder alongside wild plant starches illustrates how these early communities invested significant time and effort into transforming inedible resources into consumable food, a strategy crucial for obtaining sufficient calories to sustain a sedentary lifestyle, especially during periods of resource scarcity. These insights illuminate the subsistence strategies of early Neolithic societies transitioning from reliance on hunting‐gathering to more settled practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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8. Cultivating diversity at the onset of agriculture: insights from the Lower Yangtze in the 10th millennium bp
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An, Ting, Zhang, Zhiheng, Zheng, Yunfei, Peng, Yu, and Jiang, Leping
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- 2025
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9. On the Structure of Early Neolithic Societies of the Forest Tobol-Ishim Area: morphology and ornamentation of the pottery
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Zakh Viktor A.
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archaeology ,western siberia ,early neolithic ,types of pottery ,ratio ,sociocultural structure of societies ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The Early Neolithic complexes located in Western Siberia are characterized by the following common determinant features: chronological position within the end of 7,000 – turn of 6,000 cal BC, flat-bottomed vessels, design layouts of vessel necks (lips, rims, collars), and geometric and tree-like ornamental elements. The ceramic complexes are distinguished by different qualitative and quantitative ratios of the types of pottery (Boborykino, Koshkino, Satyga (with rims), comb ceramics, etc.) identified by researchers. When found in the same occupation layer, such a variety of ceramics might be evidence of an unequal sociocultural structure of the Neolithic population groups. The author stand for the concept that ceramic production and new stone processing skills and technologies were introduced (Zach, 2018, 2020) to the indigenous groups with Mesolithic traditions. It resulted in the interaction of autochthonous groups and newcomers and the subsequent merging of their structures, which ran differently in different territories. The author tend to consider the development of “syncretistic” societies in the first stages of such interaction in the Tobol-Ishim Rivers area as a process of transition from the Mesolithic to the Neolithic. Various types of pottery have been recorded at Boborykino complexes. The variety increases at Koshkino complexes, in different settlements and different proportions, which apparently reflects the formation of a new stable cultural tradition. The Kozlovo ceramics became such a tradition, being characterized by round-bottomed vessels with sags in the interior of the rim and a combination of ornaments in mainly incised-receding and comb techniques.
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- 2024
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10. Neolitization of the Forest Steppe and Forest Middle Volga Region: different expressions of the same process
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Konstantin M. Andreev and Alexander S. Kudashov
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archaeology ,mesolithic ,early neolithic ,forest steppe volga region ,mari volga region ,neolithization ,ceramic traditions ,stone tools ,dwellings ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
This article deals with a systematic analysis of the process of transition to the New Stone Age in two adjacent regions. The characteristics of natural and climatic conditions and flint complexes of the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic periods are given. For the forested Middle Volga region, a description of dwelling structures characteristic of both periods is given. A search for analogies to the early pottery of the regions is also carried out and the probable sources of its borrowing are determined. The latest developments in the field of absolute dating of the complexes of interest and the results of analyzing the technology of ware production are taken into account. The differences in the material culture of the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic population of the forest steppe Volga region are turned out to be quite significant. The presented circumstance allows us to assume direct migration of the population to the region from areas familiar with ceramic production, which contributes to its neolithization. The continuity in the tradition of flintworking between the Middle and New Stone Ages is characteristic of the Middle Volga forests. A certain closeness is recorded in the house-building techniques of both periods. The innovation – pottery – is probably related in its origin to the population of the forest steppe zone. Taking into account a number of the above-mentioned circumstances, it is acceptable to consider the neolithization of the forested Middle Volga region as a result of the diffusion of some groups of the southern population (Еlshanka culture). They do not have a significant influence on the material culture of the aboriginal population, and the tradition of making pottery is transformed as a result of adaptation by the local population.
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- 2024
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11. Early Neolithic Culture of Baraba Forest Steppe: issues and features
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Vyacheslav I. Molodin
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archaeology ,baraba neolithic culture ,early neolithic ,flat-bottomed pottery ,blade technique ,insert tools ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
In October 2024, scientific community celebrates the 70th anniversary of the prominent scientist and science organizer A.A. Vybornov. The issues of Neolithic period are of particular importance in his work, so the issues of Western Siberian Early Neolithic are of undoubted interest to Aleksandr Alekseevich. The Baraba Early Neolithic culture has been discovered recently, but it attracts the constant attention of specialists. This work is dedicated to certain cultural issues that are under development. The obtained series of radiocarbon dates allows the authors to date the culture within the end of the VIII – beginning of the VI millennium BC, and its periodization is currently being developed. A special feature of the culture is the peculiar technology and morphology of flat-bottomed pottery. The set of stone artefacts is characterized by a blade technique of production, rooted in the Upper Paleolithic period. The Baraba culture is characterized by the widespread use of bone, from which products characteristic exclusively for this culture were made, and insert tools. A feature of the culture is the presence of special pits for fish fermentation in settlements, containing ritual offerings in the form of various animals or their parts. The culture appears to be autochthonous, but its western and southwestern relations are clearly recorded.
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- 2024
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12. On the 'Periphery' of the Neolithic: hunter-gatherers of Europe
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Ekaterina V. Dolbunova and Andrey N. Mazurkevich
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archaeology ,early neolithic ,ancient pottery ,hunter-gatherers ,technological analysis ,modelling ,eastern europe ,vessel function ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The article discusses the main components, determining the neolithization process of Eastern Europe, i.e. paleoclimatic triggers, distribution of archaeological cultures and innovations, the appearance of the first pottery as a fundamental criterion, reflecting changes within hunter-gatherer communities and modeling the chronology of this process. The first results of multivariate statistical analysis of Early Neolithic pottery assemblages of Eastern Europe are presented. Special attention is paid to the discussion of hunter-gatherer pottery in Northern, Central, and Western Europe. The study of the latter indicates different ways of origin of various cultures, as well as fundamental differences between them. The discussion of models, created for the Early Neolithic, the introduction of archaeological information suggests the existence of cultural and natural boundaries that may have delayed or accelerated the spread of different innovations and new populations, as well as a mechanism for the spread of pottery as an innovation in which knowledge of the functional use/content of vessels was transmitted as a single package together with traditions in technology, decor and morphology.
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- 2024
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13. Early Neolithic of Southern Belarus: current state and prospects for study
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Oleg Yu. Tkachev and Maryia I. Tkacheva
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archaeology ,neolithization ,early neolithic ,southern belarus ,ceramics ,pripyat-neman culture ,dubichay type ,eastern polesie culture ,upper dnieper culture ,strumel-gastyatin type ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The article discusses the main hypotheses of the emergence of ceramic production in the territory of Southern Belarus. The authors relate the appearance of ceramics, the main sign of the beginning of the Neolithic for the forest zone of Eastern Europe, to impulses originating from the Southern Bug and Dniester. The Early Neolithic of the south of Belarus is represented by the Pripyat-Neman, Eastern Polesie, Upper Dnieper cultures and monuments of the Strumel-Gastyatin type. The first ceramics, according to the current dates from the territory of Belarus and the Belarusian-Ukrainian borderland, appears in the south of the republic in the middle of the second half of the VI millennium BC. The idea of making ceramics penetrates into Western Polesie from Volyn, and into the southwest of Belarus – through the Dnieper. Ceramics of the Dubichay and Strumel-Gastyatin types are formed under the influence of representatives of the Samchinskaya phase of the Bug-Dniester culture. Subsequently, the pottery production technology spread to the territory of Lower Pripyat, where the Eastern Polesie culture was formed. The Upper Dnieper culture began to form in the middle of the V millennium BC under the influence of an impulse that went from east to west through the Desna.
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- 2024
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14. Monuments with Early Neolithic Combed Ware from the Southeastern Lake Onega Region
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Marina V. Ivanishcheva and Natalya V. Kosorukova
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archaeology ,early neolithic ,combed ware ,sites ,chronology ,petrographic analysis ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The territory of the Southeastern Lake Onega region includes the Southern Lake Onega region, the basins of Lake Beloye and Lake Vozhe within the borders of the Vologda Oblast. Early Neolithic sites with combed ware in this area became known in the late 1980s – early 2000s. Ceramics with combed patterns are the most representative here. At sites, studied on a wide area, radiocarbon determinations were obtained for this group of ceramics, and the composition of the pottery paste was studied. The abundance of material obtained at these sites and its dating by natural science methods make it possible to clarify the chronological position of pottery assemblages of other sites, previously not distinguished from the general array of Neolithic ware and to fill archaeological gaps on the map of Early Neolithic antiquities with factual material. This article provides a review of the ceramic collections of sites with Early Neolithic combed pottery known today in this region.
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- 2024
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15. Reading between the lines: A study of Harris lines in Middle Holocene foragers of the Cis‐Baikal.
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Michelman, Lauren M., Bazaliiskii, Vladimir I., Weber, Andrzej W., and Lieverse, Angela R.
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PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *BONE remodeling , *BONE growth , *NEOLITHIC Period , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Harris lines (HLs) are radiographically visible transverse lines of thickened bone that develop from temporary growth cessation during early life. Often attributed to physiological stress during development, HLs are frequently observed in the long bones of adolescents and become less visible over time due to bone remodeling. In recent years, the validity of HL as a sign of stress has been called into question and the methods used in studying HL through X‐ray analysis scrutinized. In this study, 80 individuals from the Middle Holocene Cis‐Baikal region of Siberia, from the Early Neolithic (EN; 7560–6660 HPD cal. BP) and Late Neolithic (LN; 6060–4970 HPD cal. BP), were studied for the presence and severity of HL. Radiographic analysis employed both the traditional clinical anteroposterior (A–P) orientation and a potentially improved mediolateral (M–L) orientation. EN groups in the Cis‐Baikal are known to have experienced higher levels than their LN counterparts; thus, if HL reflect stress experiences, we expected to see more HL in the EN population compared with the LN population. We also expected more visible HL in the M–L orientation due to the suggested improvement in capturing more lines compared with the A–P orientation. While the results support the use of M–L orientation during X‐ray capture of HL, there was not a higher number of HL in the EN population as expected. Instead, no significant differences were found in HL severity between the EN and LN populations, and age‐at‐death resulted in a greater effect on HL counts regardless of mortuary site. The results from this study align not with known stress data from the Middle Holocene Cis‐Baikal populations but rather with data pertaining to known growth patterns. We therefore advocate against the use of HL as a sign of physiological stress and instead suggest HL as a reflection of bone growth trajectory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Milk production in pottery. Evidence for various exploited resources used by the first farmers in Central Pyrenees using the morphological, chemical and stable carbon isotopic composition of organic residues from ceramic vessels.
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Tarifa-Mateo, Nàdia, Laborda, R., Sierra, A., Montes, L., Utrilla, P., Saña, M., Motsch, E., Schaeffer, P., and Adam, P.
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From the second part of the 6th millennium BC onwards, pottery manufacture is attested throughout the western Mediterranean. The study of the functional and use of vessels has become a valuable source of information on the culinary patterns and subsistence practices of past societies. In the present study, we have analyzed the organic residues of a total of 37 ceramic vessels from the first Neolithic settlements in the Central Pyrenees. Results from lipid analysis using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC–MS) and GC-stable carbon isotope ratio analyses (GC-IRMS) revealed that from the earliest phases, the use of pottery was related to the exploitation of dairy and meat products, as well as plant resources. The data obtained are contextualized within the general frame of the Pyrenees and the western Mediterranean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Life and death of the first groups of farmers on the Catalan coast. Historical essay on the settlement of the Catalan coast between 5500 and 4000 BCE
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Miquel Molist and Anna Bach-Gómez
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Early Neolithic ,coast ,Catalonia ,archaeology ,History (General) and history of Europe ,History of Spain ,DP1-402 - Abstract
Historical analyses of the appearance of the earliest crop and livestock farming societies on the Catalan coast have always been the focus of debate within the overarching topic of the arrival of new settlers who came by sea and/or land to bring knowledge associated with the production economy based on the adoption of crop and livestock farming. In order to examine this topic, we consider the archaeological documents that make it possible to identify the places these groups lived and frequented, along with the records from their funerary practices. All of this data, coupled with the associated materials, are considered essential in analysing the evolution and diversity of the different types of settlements of these crop or livestock farmers within the timeframe of the sixth to fourth millennia BCE in the stretch of land running along the extensive Catalan coastline.
- Published
- 2024
18. El Abrigo de Guachos (Sepúlveda, Segovia): un nuevo yacimiento del Neolítico antiguo en el interior peninsular
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David Álvarez-Alonso, María de Andrés-Herrero, Enrique Cerrillo-Cuenca, Luis Martínez Chamizo, Laura Barrado Rodríguez, Rosario Cebrián Fernández, Verónica Estaca Gómez, and Fermín de los Reyes Gómez
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industria lítica ,neolítico antiguo ,época tardorromana ,radiocarbono ,terra sigillata ,lithic industry ,early neolithic ,late roman period ,radiocarbon ,Auxiliary sciences of history ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
En este trabajo se presenta el descubrimiento de un nuevo yacimiento del Neolítico antiguo en el interior peninsular (cuenca del Duero), a partir de los resultados preliminares de la campaña de sondeo realizada en septiembre de 2023. El Abrigo de Guachos además de contener un nuevo e interesante registro para analizar el comienzo del Neolítico en el interior peninsular, muestra también evidencias de ocupaciones y actividad humana posterior, en época romana (periodo bajoimperial). Esta nueva secuencia resulta de gran interés para analizar la evolución de la actividad humana en el barranco del río Duratón. En las Hoces del Duratón, a pesar de haber una rica secuencia de arte rupestre que abarca desde el Neolítico hasta la Edad Media, no se han podido localizar aún secuencias arqueológicas que permitan documentar la evolución y características de este amplio poblamiento humano. ABSTRACT: In this paper, the discovery of a new Early Neolithic site in the interior of the Iberian peninsula (Duero basin) is presented, based on the preliminary results of the excavation campaign conducted in September 2023. The Guachos rock shelter is located in the municipality of Sepúlveda (Segovia) within the “Hoces del río Duratón” Natural reserve, approximately 1300 meters downstream from the Talcano Roman bridge. Specifically, it is located on the outer side of a meander on the left bank of the river, which has eroded the Cretaceous dolomites, at UTM coordinates ETRS89 (Zone 30) X. 434.944, Y. 4.571.952, and about 10 meters above the current riverbed. The rock shelter has maximum dimensions of about 50 meters in length and 20 meters in width, with an average height to the overhang of about 13 meters, making it a space of considerable size. In total, an approximate area of 300 square meters for the archaeological deposit has been estimated. The Guachos Rock Shelter, in addition to containing a new and interesting record for analyzing the beginning of the Neolithic in the interior of the Iberian peninsula, also shows evidence of later occupations and human activity during the Roman period (Low Roman Empire). This new sequence is of great interest for studying the evolution of human activity in the Duratón River gorge. In the “Hoces del Duratón”, despite the presence of a rich sequence of rock art spanning from the Neolithic to the Middle Ages, archaeological sequences that would allow for the documentation of the evolution and characteristics of this extensive human settlement have not yet been found.
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- 2024
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19. The Children of Aşıklı Höyük
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Mihriban Özbaşaran, Sera Yelözer, Nurcan Kayacan, and Güneş Duru
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central anatolia ,cappadocia ,early neolithic ,aşıklı höyük ,children ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Childhood is the most crucial stage in human life, as well as for the cognitive and technological development of our species. However, earlier traditional archaeological studies have often neglected the role of children in prehistoric societies and focused on the primary socio-economic elements of daily life in prehistory (e.g. agriculture, animal husbandry, hunting-gathering, and various crafts). The picture of a Neolithic village portrayed by archaeologists mostly comprised adults who were engaged in production and subsistence. Children, were seen as passive until they reached a certain age when they became active in production. Increasing ethnographic and archaeological studies however, portray a contrasting picture as they yield insights into the learning and transmission processes of know-how and skills regarding socio-economic activities, technologies, and craft production which suggest that social roles and identities are all formed during childhood. Thus, although the state of research shows that we still have further steps to go, it is clear that a deeper understanding of childhood and children in prehistory is as essential as understanding the world of adults. In such an attempt, this article focuses on the children of Aşıklı Höyük, an Early Neolithic community in Central Anatolia. We briefly discuss the skeletal evidence emerging from the anthropological analyses, and attempt to approach the roles and identities of children through the lens of grave goods and lithic production technologies.
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- 2024
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20. Assessing the Role of Wooden Vessels, Basketry, and Pottery at the Early Neolithic Site of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain)
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Bertin Ingrid, Romero-Brugués Susagna, Tzerpou Evdoxia, Morera Núria, Théry-Parisot Isabelle, and Piqué Raquel
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functionality ,wooden bowls ,basketry ,pottery ,early neolithic ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Organic containers are rarely preserved in archaeological contexts. As a result, the work involved in their production and their functions remains invisible unlike other containers commonly better represented, such as pottery. The early Neolithic site of La Draga (5300–4900 cal BC), located on the shore of the Lake Banyoles (Spain), has provided several containers made of wood and plant fibres besides a significant amount of ceramic remains. The aim of this study is to provide an overview of the vessels at La Draga to assess the importance of organic containers in a context where pottery technology is well known and employed for several functions. The importance of the different types of containers in the context of this farming society is assessed through the analysis of the number of remains, their sizes and shapes, and their spatial distribution. The exceptional preservation of the organic vessels allows comparisons to generate hypotheses about their function. Wooden containers are associated with consumption, while baskets may have been used to transport or store foodstuff, and ceramic vessels also for cooking. The spatial distribution of basketry remains tends to show an area that could be linked to the storage of cereals.
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- 2024
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21. A special source: making porphyritic andesite axeheads at the Eagle’s Nest, Lambay, Ireland in the Early Neolithic.
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Cooney, Gabriel, O’Neill, Brendan, Revell, Martha, Gilhooly, Bernard, and Knutson, Rachael
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This paper considers the Early Neolithic phase of activity on an axehead quarry at the Eagle’s Nest, Lambay, a small island off the east coast of Ireland. The site is best known for activity in the later Neolithic and its cultural connections with the developed passage tomb tradition. One area of the site has produced evidence for quarrying from the thirty-eighth or thirty-seventh century cal BC, supplying secure evidence that axe production was integral to the Neolithic material world in Ireland from the beginnings of this period. Porphyritic andesite would seem a counter-intuitive choice to make stone axeheads, its naturally occurring internal fissuring resulting in a high likelihood of failure during working. On the other hand, when ground and polished it has a very distinctive visual appearance and texture with a lustrous quality. This paper examines the ontological significance of this transformation from source to special objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Aşıklı Höyük’ün Çocukları.
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Özbaşaran, Mihriban, Yelözer, Sera, Kayacan, Nurcan, and Duru, Güneş
- Abstract
Copyright of Höyük is the property of Turkish Historical Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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23. ADDRESSING THE INTENSITY OF CHANGES IN THE PREHISTORIC POPULATION DYNAMICS: POPULATION GROWTH RATE ESTIMATIONS IN THE CENTRAL BALKANS EARLY NEOLITHIC.
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Blagojević, Tamara, Porčić, Marko, and Stefanović, Sofija
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POPULATION dynamics ,NEOLITHIC Period ,DEMOGRAPHIC transition ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,RADIOCARBON dating - Abstract
The intensity of changes in the population dynamics of the Early Neolithic (ca. 6250–5300 cal BC) communities in the Central Balkans was addressed by estimating the growth rate values. The Bayesian approach (Crema and Shoda 2021) of estimating intrinsic growth rates by fitting different models of population growth was applied to radiocarbon dates from the Early Neolithic sites in Serbia. We explored two possible episodes of population growth based on the results of the population dynamics reconstruction using the summed calibrated radiocarbon probability distributions (SPD) method. The results have shown that, within the first episode of growth, the intrinsic growth rate mean values are higher than the estimated continental average (between 1% and 2%). The results indicate a sudden and fast rise in population size, possibly due to the influx of the new population settling in the region at the beginning of the Neolithic. Lower values for the second episode could indicate more gradual population growth due to the mechanisms associated with the Neolithic Demographic Transition and the rise in fertility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Dating the Early Neolithic in Pelagonia
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Goce Naumov and Agathe Reingruber
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Early Neolithic ,Pelagonia, geographical region of Macedonia ,absolute chronology ,Neolithization process ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Since Gordon V. Childe first discussed the diffusion of culture from the Near East into Europe 100 years ago, various models for the advance of the Neolithic way of life have been proposed. Chronology has played an important role in this, but not all regions were included in the narratives due to a lack of data. Recent investigations in the border area between North Macedonia and Greece, namely in Pelagonia, have provided reliable new radiocarbon sequences, in total 42 new radiocarbon dates, that will contribute to the discussion on the Neolithic chronology of the Balkans.
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- 2024
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25. Lithic production and the use of siliceous raw material in the Neolithic of Istria, Croatia
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Katarina Šprem
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Early Neolithic ,Middle Neolithic ,lithic analysis ,Istria ,Croatia ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
This article contains the results of the lithic analysis of assemblages from the Neolithic sites of Kargadur and Vižula in southern Istria, Croatia. The assemblages have been analysed in terms of reduction strategies and typology, with a special focus on raw material analysis and petrographic analysis. During the Early Neolithic, and especially the Middle Neolithic, raw materials circulated the Istrian peninsula, as evidenced by the presence of obsidian and other non-local (exogenous) chert at several sites. Obsidian is certainly an exotic material in this region, and items found at Kargadur come from the Aeolian islands. With these results we have tried to gain a better understanding of lithic production of the period, the approach of the Neolithic people to raw materials and the scope of the distribution network of high-quality chert.
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- 2024
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26. Coastal Landscapes of the Mesolithic
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Schülke, Almut
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Late Mesolithic ,Cal BP. ,Cal Bp ,Early Mesolithic ,Coastal Hunter Gatherers ,Maritime Hunter Gatherers ,Mesolithic Sites ,Middle Mesolithic ,Southeastern Norway ,Oslo Fjord ,Mesolithic Period ,Late Mesolithic Sites ,Late Mesolithic Period ,Radiocarbon Dates ,Baltic Sea Basin ,Early Neolithic ,Eastern Norway ,Land Uplift ,Coastal Hinterland ,Shell Middens ,Western Norway ,Coastal Landscapes ,Shoreline Displacement ,Mesolithic People ,Coastal Sites ,Archaeology by period / region ,Landscape archaeology - Abstract
Coastal Landscapes of the Mesolithic: Human Engagement with the Coast from the Atlantic to the Baltic Sea explores the character and significance of coastal landscapes in the Mesolithic – on different scales and with various theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches. Mesolithic people were strongly connected to the sea, with coastal areas vital for subsistence and communication across the water. This anthology includes case studies from Scandinavia, western Europe and the Baltic area, presented by key international researchers. Topics addressed include large-scale analyses of the archaeological and geological development of coastal areas, the exploration of coastal environments with interdisciplinary methods, the discussion of the character of coastal settlements and of their possible networks, social and economic practices along the coast, as well as perceptions and cosmological aspects of coastal areas. Together, these topics and approaches contribute in an innovative way to the understanding of the complexity of topographically changing coastal areas as both border zones between land and sea and as connecting landscapes. Providing novel insights into the study of the Mesolithic as well as coastal areas and landscapes in general, the book is an important resource for researchers of the Mesolithic and coastal archaeology.
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- 2024
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27. Sokolny VII – a New Site of the Early Neolite of the Republic of Mari El
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Kudashov Alexander S., Andreev Konstantin M., Vybornov Alexander A., Aleshinskaya Anna S., Vasilieva Irina N., Somov Anatoly V., and Panteleeva Tatyana Y.
- Subjects
archaeology ,forest middle volga region ,sokolny xvii site ,republic of mari el ,early neolithic ,unornamented pottery ,spiked ceramics ,flint tools ,palynological studies ,pottery technology ,historical and cultural approach ,radiocarbon dating ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The article presents the results of a study of the Sokolny XVII camp-site (Republic of Mari El). The physical and geographical characteristics of the location of the site are given and a brief history of the study is given. Information about the stratigraphy and planographic distribution of finds is presented. The authors publish data on palynological analysis. A ceramic complex consisting of 52 vessels is characterized. A study of ceramics manufacturing technology was carried out based on a historical and cultural approach. An analysis of the elements and motifs of the ornament is carried out. The ceramic and flint complex of the Sokolny XVII site typologically and technologically finds the closest analogies in the materials of the Early Neolithic of the Mari Volga region. At the same time, the collection contains some local features. In ancient times, at the site of the site there were mixed broadleaved and coniferous forests with a predominance of pine; linden and oak also played an important role in the composition of the forests. Data on the technical and technological analysis of ceramics indicate the existence of several types of initial plastic raw materials with uniformity in the formulation of the molding mass. The obtained radiocarbon dates, as well as existing analogies, help determine the time of existence of the monument in the second half of the 6th millennium BC.
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- 2024
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28. Complexes with flat-bottomed pottery from the early 7th millennium BC settlements of the Mergen archaeological microdistrict (the Lower Ishim River basin)
- Author
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Enshin D.N., Skochina S.N., and Ilyushina V.V.
- Subjects
early neolithic ,western siberia ,mergen ,flat-bottomed ceramic complexes ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
An analysis was carried out on the materials from the settlements of the Early Neolithic period at Lake Mergen (Mergen 3, 7, 8) in the Lower Ishim River basin (Western Siberia). The aim of the research was the consolidation of the obtained data and its preliminary correlation with synchronous complexes of the forest-steppe zone of the Trans-Urals and Western Siberia. The source base of the work was constituted by the Early Neolithic pottery collections, stone goods, and planigraphic drawings of the archaeological sites. The pottery-making traditions of the ancient population were analysed from the standpoint of syncretising two approaches — formal classificatory, and historical and cultural — in several stages: comparative-typological analysis of the morphology and ornamentation, and preliminary conclusions of the technical-technological investigation of artefacts. The stone goods are presented from the results of the typological and traceological investigation and using the data of the petrography. The house-building traditions have been considered in terms of a thorough analysis of the planigraphy and stratigraphy of the buildings, as well as taking into account the established classification of the archaeological sites. As the result, it has been found that for the ancient communities at Lake Mergen characteristic were the dwellings with ditches of a rounded shape, contralateral recessions, and drains in the floors. Predominant were open thick-walled flat-bottomed pottery vessels of potted-jarlike shapes, with a rounded cut of the rims, ornamentation, in the stroke or streak technique. About a third of the items were without ornamentation. The straight line, sparse pitted indentation, and zigzag constitute the principal element of decoration. Nearly half of the ornamented vessels feature compositions elaborated with geometrical figures (triangles, rhombi, parallelograms), rhombic lattice etc. As the raw moldable material in the ware fabrication, potters used highly oversanded silty clays, to which chamotte and organic compound were added. Scrap was the main building material. The firing was carried out in the natural conditions under the effect of temperatures no less than 650°C. The dominant raw material in the stone industry is represented by local run-of-river quartzose sandstone. Also identified were rocks related to the South-Urals jasper province, Kazakh Uplands. The complex is lamelliferous, dominated by the items of a width up to 1 cm (60%). On the basis of the obtained data, there has been established the chronological priority of the considered materials with respect to the complex of the settlement of Mergen 6, whilst in the pottery making the link with its pottery group I (Boborykino). There have been confirmed the analogies with the Boborykino complex of the settlement of Yurtobor 3 (the Lower Tobol River basin). A hypothesis has been drawn on the synchroneity with the Barabino antiquities (the Barabino Culture of the Neolithic), similarity of the Neolithic with flat-bottomed pottery with them within the Western Siberian affinity, but not on the cultural unity.
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- 2023
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29. Pig domestication and human subsistence at the early Neolithic site of Guanjia (6100–5500 BC), Central China.
- Author
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You, Yue, Chen, Xianglong, Hein, Anke, Qin, Cunyu, Zhao, Yanan, Zhang, Jiaxin, Liu, Tianyang, Fan, Wenquan, and Yuan, Guangkuo
- Abstract
This case study of the early Neolithic Guanjia site (6100–5500 BC) combines zooarchaeological, paleobotanical, and isotope research to investigate how humans raised pigs and incorporated them in their overall subsistence system. Although the teeth (M2) of Sus scrofa from Guanjia were all larger than domesticated pigs dating to the middle Neolithic (Yangshao period, 5000–3000 BC) and early Bronze Age (2000–1000 BC), which would suggest that Guanjia pigs were not domesticated pigs morphologically if body size is a key criterion to identify domesticated animals, we still argue that there was human management of pigs via feeding and culling strategies. We base our argument on the following observations: (1) Sus scrofa accounts for 34.2% (n = 41) of NISP and 22.2% (n = 4) of MNI; (2) most individuals were younger than two years at time of death (mandible n = 5, epiphyseal fusion n = 14) and most are female; (3) distorted alignment of teeth, a deformation related to early domestication, was found on one left mandible; (4) compared to pure C3 diets seen in deer (δ13C = − 21.0 ± 0.7‰, n = 3), the majority of Sus scrofa consumed some C4 plants (δ13C = − 17.4 ± 0.8‰, n = 6), probably from C4 wild grass or cultivated millets; (5) Panicoideae starch grain, broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum), and foxtail millet (Setaria italica) phytoliths were found at Guanjia, further supporting our argument that Sus scrofa accessed C4 millets and human environments. This study also reveals that animals in the early stages of domestication and domestic plants only accounted for a small proportion of human subsistence; thus, people still relied heavily on hunting and gathering at Guanjia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Mountainous cultural crossroads: voyages for ochre quarrying.
- Author
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Kościuk-Załupka, Julia
- Subjects
MINERAL pigments ,OCHER ,OUTCROPS (Geology) ,QUARRIES & quarrying ,NEOLITHIC Period - Abstract
Recent decades have presented increased interest in provenance studies. However, such research in the area of mineral pigments are rare in archaeological discourse. The main aim of this paper is to portray the state of knowledge on this issue, followed by a presentation of ochre outcrops in the Carpathian Basin. The discussion is additionally illustrated by examples of 10 archaeological sites with described ochre traces from the Early Neolithic period. Moreover, two models of ochre acquisition are proposed: the first assumes direct quarrying, while the second includes potential intra-group contacts. For this reason, two roughly established areas of interest, within 50 and 150 kilometres in diameter, were proposed. Those hypothetical circles would contribute to the understanding of general mobility patterns pertaining to the discussed communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. Dating the Early Neolithic in Pelagonia: closing a chronological gap in Balkan prehistory.
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Naumovi, Goce and Reingruber, Agathe
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RADIOCARBON dating ,NEOLITHIC Period ,CARBON isotopes ,CHRONOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Documenta Praehistorica is the property of Documenta Praehistorica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
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32. Lithic production and the use of siliceous raw material in the Neolithic of Istria, Croatia - a case study from Kargadur and Vižula.
- Author
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Šprem, Katarina
- Subjects
MATERIALS analysis ,RAW materials ,NEOLITHIC Period ,OBSIDIAN ,CHERT - Abstract
Copyright of Documenta Praehistorica is the property of Documenta Praehistorica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. DOUĂ AŞEZĂRI STARČEVO-CRIŞ DIN COMUNA PERIENI, JUDEŢUL VASLUI.
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Oancă, Mircea and Gîlea, Adrian-Ionuţ
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC names ,MIDDLE Ages ,TWENTIETH century ,FIELD research ,POTTERY - Abstract
As part of our approach, the main objective was to identify the two archaeological sites within the radius of Perieni commune, Vaslui county. Although there were mentions in the specialized literature about them and, in the case of the Perieni-Râpa Râşcanilor (Roşcanilor) settlement, archaeological excavations were carried out, their exact position in the administrative territory of the Perieni commune was not known. The settlement of Perieni-Râpa Râşcanilor (Roşcanilor) is located approximately 1.7 km NNW from the current center of Perieni village (Pl. 3), on Roşca Valley, as the place name appears on the map of Moldova from 1892-1898 (Pl. 1/2) and on early 20th century firing plans. Following this research, it was found that the habitation during the Starčevo-Criş culture is the most intense, followed by the linear pottery culture, Hallstatt, the Sântana de Mureş-Cerneahov culture and the early Middle Ages. The second settlement, the one from Perieni-Valea Babei, was identified on a ledge located at an interfluve of two streams that have a temporary course (Pl. 3/1,2), on the northern edge of the village, at the northern entrance of the village Perieni, approximately 1.4 km southeast of the settlement of Perieni-Râpa Râşcanilor (Roşcanilor). In this settlement we discovered materials characteristic of the Starčevo-Criş culture. Taking into account the materials discovered in the two archaeological sites, discoveries that correspond to the results of previous research, we can say that we have succeeded in achieving our goal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Early Neolithic Settlement and Graves in Lisbon's Historic Centre.
- Author
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LUÍS CARDOSO, JOÃO and MARTINS, FILIPE
- Subjects
NEOLITHIC Period ,BUILDING design & construction ,ARCHAEOLOGY ,TOMBS ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations ,HUMAN beings - Abstract
Copyright of Cuadernos de Prehistoria y Arqueologia is the property of Cuadernos de Prehistoria y Arqueologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Raw Material Characteristics of Stone Tools from the Early Neolithic Settlement of the Barabinsk Forest-Steppe
- Author
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Bobrov, Vladimir V., Veretennikov, Aleksei V., Bezaeva, Natalia S., Series Editor, Gomes Coe, Heloisa Helena, Series Editor, Nawaz, Muhammad Farrakh, Series Editor, Ankusheva, Natalia, editor, Chechushkov, Igor V., editor, Epimakhov, Andrey, editor, Ankushev, Maksim, editor, and Ankusheva, Polina, editor
- Published
- 2023
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36. Kerpiç production and environmental dynamics in an early sedentary community: micromorphological evidence from Aşıklı Höyük, Central Anatolia (Turkey)
- Author
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Uzdurum, Melis, Mentzer, Susan M., Duru, Güneş, Kuzucuoğlu, Catherine, and Özbaşaran, Mihriban
- Abstract
This article illustrates how changes in the sediment source, tempering strategies, and shaping process in early Neolithic earthen architecture in Aşıklı Höyük have a major impact on many aspects of techno-environmental know-how traces. Archaeological micromorphology analyses of sun-dried mudbricks (in Turkey, called a specific term: kerpiç), mortars, daub, and their paleoenvironmental contexts were used to examine the tempo and modes of exploitation of the local environment, and chaîne opératoire of kerpiç and mortar recipes, and the possible reasons behind the relationships among material choices, building forms, and wall construction techniques of the earlier inhabitants in Central Anatolia during the establishment of the early settlement, i.e., 8400–7750 BCE. The nature of and changes in the built environment can be traced especially through the mortar recipes that provide various insights into the agro-pastoral activities at the site, including middens, open areas, and penning deposits. During the early Neolithic occupation at Aşıklı Höyük, vegetal tempering occurred as a micro-invention and was developed in relation to the management of fecal and domestic waste used in construction materials. Furthermore, the variability of tempering strategies can be regarded as a cognitive development that resulted from the long-term learning and experimentation background of the Aşıklı people in kerpiç production. The main motivation behind these changes and testing of the recipes was the need for more durable and long-lasting construction of earthen buildings as used by this early sedentary community in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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37. Distinct modes and intensity of bird exploitation at the dawn of agriculture in the Upper Euphrates and Tigris River basins.
- Author
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Pöllath, Nadja and Peters, Joris
- Abstract
Early Neolithic avifaunas excavated at the sites of Göbekli Tepe and Gusir Höyük illustrate two entirely different modes of bird exploitation in south-eastern Anatolia during the 10th and 9th millennia BCE, which prompted us the re-evaluation of other substantial bird bone assemblages from contemporaneous sites in the upper basins of the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. We thus compared the range and diversity of species captured, seasonal aspects of bird hunting, and types of habitats exploited by Near Eastern communities of foragers at the dawn of agriculture. Fowling practices in the Upper Euphrates catchment aimed at multiple avifaunal resources in varied habitats explaining high taxonomic diversity in the respective assemblages. Overall, the proportions of birds, mammals and fish in the diet were similar in all sites. In contrast, meat diet in the Upper Tigris River basin proved less culturally uniform. The contribution of birds, fish and mammals to the diet varied significantly between sites. Our study also showed that avifaunal diversity was very low at some sites in the Tigris basin suggesting an overall limited interest and time commitment to this economic activity there. An intensification of bird hunting in autumn and winter was observed in both areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Dnieper-Dvina basin at the end of 6th millennium BC and early ceramic traditions of the Circum-Baltic region
- Author
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Dolbunova Ekaterina V., Mazurkevich Andrey N., Maigrot Yolein, and Filippova Veronika L.
- Subjects
archaeology ,early neolithic ,dnieper-dvina basin ,rudnya culture ,narva culture ,chronology ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The most ancient pottery in the Eastern Europe appeared at the end of the 7th – first half of the 6th millennium BC and spread across a greater part of the Eastern Europe, including the Dnieper-Dvina basin by the middle of the 6th millennium BC. At the end of the 6th millennium BC new ceramic traditions appeared here, attributed to the Rudnya archaeological culture. The authors present an overview of the ceramic complex, bone industry, constructions, and chronology of the Rudnya culture. Similarities with ceramic complex of the Rudnya culture were found within various groups of the Narva culture. It could testify the change of vectors of cultural contacts at the end of 6th millennium BC manifesting destruction of the established network of cultural contacts that existed before in the 6th millennium BC. The Narva culture traditions probably spread eastwards from Eastern Baltic at the end of 6th millennium BC. Such a radical change of material culture might be regarded as a result not only of the cultural impulse, but probably arrival of new population from the western territories to the Upper Western Dvina area.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Enclosing the settlement or filling the ditch: The case of Aşağı Pınar
- Author
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Eylem Özdoğan
- Subjects
Early Neolithic ,Eastern Thrace ,Aşağı Pınar ,ditches ,enclosures ,Prehistoric archaeology ,GN700-890 - Abstract
Ongoing research in the Balkans is revealing the importance of Early Neolithic ditches that enclosed settlements. As the research continues, more information is being uncovered about the ditches. The initial settlement at Aşağı Pinar, layer 7, also features ditches, with two ditches and associated pits found in the last two phases of this layer. However, none of these ditches had any association with settlement units. The stratigraphy and context of the fills suggest a refilling process was involved. The stratification of the fills, along with a large quantity of pottery sherds found in the fills and other finds, strongly suggest that a complex activity involving material culture led to the refilling process. This paper discusses the refilling processes and the purposes of the ditches in the context of Aşağı Pınar. Evidently, the Neolithic ditches were part of a more intricate activity than a mere enclosure system in the beginning of the Neolithic in Balkans.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Understanding the local dynamics
- Author
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Tamara Blagojević
- Subjects
Starčevo culture ,Early Neolithic ,direction of the spread ,local speeds ,Inverse Distance Weighting method ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
This study addresses the dynamics of the Neolithic expansion in the Central Balkans by reconstructing its direction and speed of spread. The Inverse Distance Weighting (IDW) method is applied to the earliest radiocarbon dates from Starčevo culture sites in Serbia. Local speed estimates are derived from the earliest dates within specified spatial bins. The results confirm the assumed south-to-north direction, revealing rapid progression, particularly in the southernmost region. The possibility of pioneering scouting groups was also discussed. The results confirm the arrhythmicity of the Neolithization processes and higher local spread rates while offering new insights into Starčevo culture mobility.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. An integrated approach to reconstruct the role of the heat treatment within the reduction sequence of chert artefacts: The case of the early Neolithic site of Lugo di Grezzana (north‐eastern Italy).
- Author
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Santaniello, Fabio, Berloffa, Angela, Grimaldi, Stefano, Pedrotti, Annaluisa, and Gialanella, Stefano
- Subjects
- *
HEAT treatment , *NEOLITHIC Period , *CHERT , *FOURIER transforms , *REFLECTANCE spectroscopy - Abstract
The lithic assemblage from the well‐known site of Lugo di Grezzana (Italy) attributable to the Fiorano group (5,300–4,900 BC cal) is analysed to shed new insights on the early Neolithic lithic technology in North‐Eastern Italy. Techno‐typological data are discussed allowing detailed reconstruction of the reduction sequence, thanks also to several refittings. A complex laminar production with several technical objectives has been identified. Whereas clues for the heat treatment of lithic materials have been identified, we verified it by a combined experimental approach. In the first place, we used density measurements, which already proved to be useful for prescreening analysis, to detect potentially heated artefacts. Afterward, we performed Fourier Transform Infrared (FT‐IR) spectroscopy tests to assess the actual (de)hydration condition of the siliceous materials. Reflectance spectra have been acquired, analysing any item and avoiding any constraint related to both morphology and thickness of the sample. The archaeometric results, combined with the reduction sequence reconstruction, provide new indications on the technical capabilities and knowledge of the human groups that inhabited the region during the early Neolithic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. El Mirador Cave Herders and Farmers
- Author
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Martín, Patricia, Allué, Ethel, Vergès, Josep M., Eerkens, Jelmer, Series Editor, Çakırlar, Canan, Editorial Board Member, Iizuka, Fumie, Editorial Board Member, Seetah, Krish, Editorial Board Member, Sugranes, Nuria, Editorial Board Member, Tushingham, Shannon, Editorial Board Member, Wilson, Chris, Editorial Board Member, Allué, Ethel, editor, Martín, Patricia, editor, and Vergès, Josep Maria, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Textile Production in Some Early Neolithic Settlements in North Macedonia
- Author
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Blažeska, Zlata, Nazim, Jasemin, Eerkens, Jelmer, Series Editor, Çak?rlar, Canan, Editorial Board Member, Iizuka, Fumie, Editorial Board Member, Seetah, Krish, Editorial Board Member, Sugranes, Nuria, Editorial Board Member, Tushingham, Shannon, Editorial Board Member, Wilson, Chris, Editorial Board Member, Ulanowska, Agata, editor, Grömer, Karina, editor, Vanden Berghe, Ina, editor, and Öhrman, Magdalena, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Stone tools of the Neolithic settlement of Mergen 8
- Author
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Skochina S.N.
- Subjects
forest-steppe zone of the ishim river basin ,settlement mergen 8 ,early neolithic ,boborykino complex ,late neolithic ,comb complex ,mixed cultural layer ,stone tools ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
In this paper, stone tools of the Neolithic settlement of Mergen 8, located in the forest-steppe zone of Western Siberia in the Lower Ishim river basin, are analyzed. The mixed cultural layer of the settlement contained materials from two periods of its inhabitation, associated with the Boborykino Culture of the early Neolithic period and with the pottery ornamented with comb stamp of the late Neolithic period. The identification of the two chronologically different types of pottery raised the question of possibility of separating the stone implements. The aim of this work is to attempt differentiation from the mixed cultural layer of the groups of stone tools associated with a certain cultural and chronological section of the settlement. The peculiarity of the cultural layer of the Mergen 8 settlement was the presence of the dwelling 1 and some pits unimpaired by the upper horizons. In the methodological aspect of this work, stratigraphic and planigraphic analyzes with the aid of the feedstock characteristics of stone formed the basis, on which a relatively clean complex of quartz sandstone and flint was isolated, associated with the filling of the dwelling 1, in which pottery of the Boborykino Culture was found. The differentiation of the stone tools from the mixed layer was based upon the raw material that was found in the bottom part of the dwelling’s ditch, undisturbed by other layers. The complex of the stone tools made of jasper quartzite and schist, established during the field fixation, is associated with the comb-type pottery. Thus, in the course of our study, out of 417 finds of the stone tools 276 (66 % of the entire complex) were assigned to the Boborykino complex, 50 (12 %) to the comb complex, and 91 finds (22 %) were not possible to attribute to any type of pottery. Bearing in mind that separation by feedstock has a certain degree of conventionality, it should be noted that the stone taken from the undisturbed near-bottom part of the Boborykino dwelling 1 reflects the most plausible nature of the stone industry of this period of inhabitation. In addition, in our opinion, attempts to link stone implements and their features with a certain type of pottery facilitate the formation of a clear concept of the development of the stone industry in the region in the Neolithic.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fish Processing in the Iron Gates Region During the Transitional and Early Neolithic Period: An Integrated Approach
- Author
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Petrović Anđa, Lemorini Cristina, Cesaro Stella Nunziante, and Živaljević Ivana
- Subjects
use-wear analysis ,residue analysis ,chipped stone tools ,fish ,experimental archaeology ,iron gates ,lepenski vir ,mesolithic–neolithic transition ,early neolithic ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites were uncovered during the past century in the Iron Gates region of the North-Central Balkans. The application of diverse analyses on the bioarchaeological remains and artefacts raised many questions, but also offered new ideas about the Mesolithic–Neolithic transitional period in the Middle and Lower course of the Danube. Communities in the Iron Gates consumed fish and exploited the riverbank in prehistory. The stable isotope analyses are implying that these human groups fed on aquatic resources in some periods more than others. Fish remains were also found in settlements, and based on fish-related imagery on sculpted boulders and other artefacts, the bond between the people, river, and the ecosystem was compelling. The idea of this article is to present the possible ways of fish processing at Lepenski Vir using chipped stone tools. Three integrated methodologies, with high levels of interpretation, were applied: use-wear, residue, and archaeozoological analyses. Use-wear and residue analyses were performed on both archaeological and experimental chipped stone tools. The results are considered together with the traces of butchery observed on archaeological samples of fish bones, creating a more coherent picture of the everyday habits of the Iron Gates populations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A Review of Malta’s Pre-Temple Neolithic Pottery Wares
- Author
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Richard-Trémeau Emma, Brogan Catriona, Betts John C., Anastasi Maxine, and Vella Nicholas C.
- Subjects
early neolithic ,maltese islands ,ceramic studies ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Sites from the earliest known phases of Maltese prehistory often consist of scatters of sherds for the Għar Dalam and Skorba phases (6000–4800 BCE), and tomb contexts for the Żebbuġ phase (3800–3600 BCE). Neolithic studies are, therefore, heavily reliant on the study of pottery. Although traditional typological and seriation-based analyses of the pottery record have substantially enhanced our knowledge of Early Neolithic Malta, there is a growing appreciation of the need to go beyond these approaches to gain new insights. This study reviews the accessible literature on fabric studies on assemblages found in the Maltese Islands, presenting the state of knowledge for the pottery of the Għar Dalam, Skorba (Early Neolithic), and Żebbuġ (Late Neolithic) phases. Microphotographs of pottery wares were selected from a compilation produced for an ongoing project (the MaltaPot project) to illustrate the descriptions found in the literature. The advances made by archaeologists in studying the Maltese Neolithic pottery are reviewed, and suggestions for building on them are proposed, as archaeometric and petrographic techniques have not been applied systematically to Neolithic pottery from Malta.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Locating Mesolithic Hunter-Gatherer Camps in the Carpathian Basin.
- Author
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Duffy, Paul R., Marton, Tibor, and Borić, Dušan
- Subjects
- *
MESOLITHIC Period , *LAND settlement patterns , *PREDICTION models , *NEOLITHIC Period , *TWENTIETH century , *TOMBS - Abstract
The Mesolithic in Eastern Europe was the last time that hunter-gatherer economies thrived there before the spread of agriculture in the second half of the seventh millennium BC. But the period, and the interactions between foragers and the first farmers, are poorly understood in the Carpathian Basin and surrounding areas because few sites are known, and even fewer have been excavated and published. How did site location differ between Mesolithic and Early Neolithic settlers? And where should we look for rare Mesolithic sites? Proximity analysis is seldom used for predictive modeling for hunter-gatherer sites at large scales, but in this paper, we argue that it can serve as an important starting point for prospection for rare and poorly understood sites. This study uses proximity analysis to provide quantitative landscape associations of known Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites in the Carpathian Basin to show how Mesolithic people chose attributes of the landscape for camps, and how they differed from the farmers who later settled. We use elevation and slope, rivers, wetlands prior to the twentieth century, and the distribution of lithic raw materials foragers and farmers used for toolmaking to identify key proxies for preferred locations. We then build predictive models for the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in the Pannonian region to highlight parts of the landscape that have relatively higher probabilities of having Mesolithic sites still undiscovered and contrast them with the settlement patterns of the first farmers in the area. We find that large parts of Pannonia conform to landforms preferred by Mesolithic foragers, but these areas have not been subject to investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Archaeobotanical and palaeoenvironmental analyses from the easternmost Early Neolithic sites at Kamyane-Zavallia (Ukraine) and Nicolaevca V (Moldova)
- Author
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Moskal-del Hoyo, Magdalena, Kapcia, Magda, Salavert, Aurélie, Alexandrowicz, Witold P., Saile, Thomas, Kiosak, Dmytro, and Dębiec, Maciej
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 bce)
- Author
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Sabanov, Amalia, Soteras, Raül, Hajdas, Irka, Naumov, Goce, and Antolín, Ferran
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A demographic analysis of mortuary practice across time and space in south-east England during the Early Neolithic period
- Author
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Cansfield, Dawn, Thorpe, Ian, and Wilkinson, Keith
- Subjects
393 ,archaeology ,Early Neolithic ,mortuary ,palaeodemography ,osteoarchology ,archaeothanatology ,burial locations ,burial orientations ,causewayed enclosures ,long barrows - Abstract
In the study of past societies, differential ritual treatment of the dead can be indicative of individuals’ identities in life. The archaeological record for burials in the Early Neolithic period (4000–3300 BC) comprises a disparate body of evidence collected over hundreds of years since the antiquarian investigations of the 18th century. As such, it poses certain challenges arising from the variety of archaeological methods deployed and the resultant data, and the different interpretative frameworks used over time as the discipline has developed and practices have gone in and out of fashion, and indeed as modern society itself has changed. Furthermore, burial practice for the period has received relatively little attention in the south-east compared to the south-west side of England. Set within the radiocarbon dating frameworks which have recently transformed the study of this period, the evidence for burial locations, positions, orientations and grave goods is subjected to osteoarchaeological, statistical, palaeodemographic and archaeothanatological analyses to build a demographic profile of the Early Neolithic burial population and practices in south-east England. This research has found that there are some aspects of demographic variation geographically across the region and in the locations of burials, with causewayed enclosures comprising a more egalitarian burial population than long barrows. This regional variation seems to result from the temporal spread of cultural ideas at this time. Burial orientations and grave goods also highlight demographic differentiation and indicate potential localised practices and customs. It is suggested that the archaeologically visible burial practices in the record for the Early Neolithic period of south-east England, which are limited in quantity, rather than memorialising the dead, may reflect an overriding concern with containment of deceased individuals of all demographic groups who were feared, perhaps due to their actions or relationships in life, for the protection of the living.
- Published
- 2019
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