TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used radiocarbon dates and crop assemblages from Ifri Oudadane, an Epipalaeolithic-Early Neolithic site from North-East Morocco, to shed light on the early stages of agricultural development in Northern Africa.
TL;DR: In this article, a team of Scandinavian researchers identified and described a Mesolithic technological concept, referred to as "the conical core pressure blade" concept, and investigated how this concept spread into Fennoscandia and across Scandinavia.
Abstract: In this paper a team of Scandinavian researchers identifies and describes a Mesolithic technological concept, referred to as ‘the conical core pressure blade’ concept, and investigates how this concept spread into Fennoscandia and across Scandinavia. Using lithic technological, contextual archaeological and radiocarbon analyses, it is demonstrated that this blade concept arrived with ‘post-Swiderian’ hunter-gatherer groups from the Russian plain into northern Fennoscandia and the eastern Baltic during the 9th millennium bc. From there it was spread by migrating people and/or as transmitted knowledge through culture contacts into interior central Sweden, Norway and down along the Norwegian coast. However it was also spread into southern Scandinavia, where it was formerly identified as the Maglemosian technogroup 3 (or the ‘Svaerdborg phase’). In this paper it is argued that the identification and spread of the conical core pressure blade concept represents the first migration of people, technology and ideas...
TL;DR: Data from 63 ancient pig specimens show that Ertebølle hunter-gatherers acquired domestic pigs of varying size and coat colour that had both Near Eastern and European mitochondrial DNA ancestry, and reveal that domestic pigs were present in the region ~500 years earlier than previously demonstrated.
Abstract: Mesolithic populations throughout Europe used diverse resource exploitation strategies that focused heavily on collecting and hunting wild prey. Between 5500 and 4200 cal BC, agriculturalists migrated into northwestern Europe bringing a suite of Neolithic technologies including domesticated animals. Here we investigate to what extent Mesolithic Ertebolle communities in northern Germany had access to domestic pigs, possibly through contact with neighbouring Neolithic agricultural groups. We employ a multidisciplinary approach, applying sequencing of ancient mitochondrial and nuclear DNA (coat colour-coding gene MC1R) as well as traditional and geometric morphometric (molar size and shape) analyses in Sus specimens from 17 Neolithic and Ertebolle sites. Our data from 63 ancient pig specimens show that Ertebolle hunter-gatherers acquired domestic pigs of varying size and coat colour that had both Near Eastern and European mitochondrial DNA ancestry. Our results also reveal that domestic pigs were present in the region ~500 years earlier than previously demonstrated.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify and define the palaeoecological characteristics of these two disturbance phases, about a millennium apart, in order to investigate whether differing land-use techniques can be identified and categorised as of either foraging or early farming cultures.
TL;DR: In this article, radiocarbon determinations from Mesolithic, Neolithic, and/or Copper Age contexts at ten sites are presented, bringing the number of absolute dates available for the East Adriatic to more than twice that of a decade ago.
Abstract: New radiocarbon determinations from Mesolithic, Neolithic, and/or Copper Age contexts at ten sites are presented, bringing the number of absolute dates available for the East Adriatic to more than twice that of a decade ago. The dates show that, from 6000 BC onward, pottery styles (Impressed Ware, Danilo variants, Hvar, Nakovana, and Cetina) emerged, spread, and disappeared at different times, places, and rates within the region. The implications for models of the spread of farming and other features of Neolithic life are discussed. The continued usefulness of the threefold division of the regional Neolithic into ‘Early’, ‘Middle’, and ‘Late’ phases is found to be dubious.
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of obsidian sourcing to reconstruct networks of interaction (or communities of practice) among populations of south-eastern Anatolia and the Near East in the context of "Neolithisation" during the late 11th-early 10th millennia BC EDXRF was used to elementally characterise 120 artefacts of Epi-Palaeolithic and Pre-Pottery Neolithic.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provided direct AMS radiocarbon dating and carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen stable isotope analysis were carried out on bone collagen samples of two single burials from the recently discovered open-air Late Mesolithic site of Casa Corona (Villena, Spain) to shed new light on the chronology and subsistence patterns of the last Mesolithic communities in the Central Mediterranean region of the Iberian Peninsula.
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed analysis of the fauna from the Late Natufian (LN; ca. 14,000/13,500/11,700 BP) cemetery of Raqefet Cave (Mount Carmel, Israel) is presented.
TL;DR: In this paper, the state of the art regarding the evidence for the earlier Neolithic subsistence economy in Britain and Ireland, based on the zooarchaeological and stable isotope data, is presented.
Abstract: Geographically, Britain and Ireland lie on the northwestern fringes of Europe. The beginning of the Neolithic here, at ca. 4000 cal BC, is marked by the appearance of a suite of domestic plants and animals, novel material culture and new ways of treating the dead. This chapter presents something of the state of play regarding the evidence for the earlier Neolithic subsistence economy in Britain and Ireland, based on the zooarchaeological and stable isotope data, and examines the evidence for regionality. There are very limited Mesolithic faunal data from Britain and Ireland with which to provide a background for the dramatic changes seen from the beginning of the Neolithic. The largest assemblage comes from the well-known Early Mesolithic site of Star Carr in northern England. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of human bone collagen provides another, independent line of inquiry into earlier Neolithic diets in Britain and Ireland, as well as into those of preceding Mesolithic populations.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the first AMS results of this project, with a total of close to 30 new dates, based on Bayesian radiocarbon dating modelling, providing a complete and detailed new perspective of the chronology of one of the most important shellmiddens (Cabeco da Amoreira) in Muge as well as the direct relation to the time of settlement of Mesolithic complex hunter-gatherers in the region and the following occupation with the reuse of the shell middens.
TL;DR: In this article, the scale and nature of human-plant exploitation in Mesolithic and Neolithic Scotland is assessed using palaeobotanical evidence, and the importance of wild and domestic plants in the Neolithic economy is difficult to establish due to differences in the deposition, preservation, recovery and recording of cereals and wild plants.
Abstract: The breakdown of the traditional rigid distinction between ‘hunter-gatherers’ and ‘farmers’ has lead to increased interest into the different types of human-plant relationships that existed in hunter-gatherer and early farming societies during the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition. This thesis assesses the scale and nature of human-plant exploitation in Mesolithic and Neolithic Scotland. Following Zvelebil (1994), several plant exploitation models are tested using palaeobotanical evidence: 1) opportunistic and incidental wild plant use; 2) systematic and intensive wild plant use; 3) wild plant food management, husbandry or cultivation; 4) the cultivation of domestic plants. It is concluded that wild plant exploitation was most probably systematic and intensive in Mesolithic Scotland, but there is no clear-cut evidence to substantiate the suggestion that Mesolithic hunter-gatherers managed wild plants. The relative importance of wild and domestic plants in the Neolithic economy is difficult to establish due to differences in the deposition, preservation, recovery and recording of cereals and wild plants. However, the importance of agriculture in the economy appears to have varied considerably between different sites and areas. In the Northern Isles and Outer Hebrides, settled agricultural communities were present and wild plant collection was insignificant. In contrast, a mixed plant subsistence economy based on both wild plant collection and cereal cultivation was probably the predominant subsistence strategy in mainland Scotland, though it appears that some apparently contemporary groups cultivated cereals on a large-scale, and others primarily focused on the collection of wild plants. The absence of cereals in assemblages from the Inner Hebrides and the West coast mainland suggests a greater degree of continuity in Mesolithic and Neolithic subsistence strategies in this area than elsewhere in Scotland. Differences in the importance of arable agriculture in each region may reflect the density of settlement in the Mesolithic and the natural availability of wild resources in the environment.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the variable chronological resolution of the Early to Middle and Middle to Late Mesolithic transitions in the RMS area, and the role of this variable resolution in their ability to investigate the contemporaneity of these two transitions with different Early Holocene abrupt cooling events.
TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed analysis of the burial practices in one of the Mesolithic cemeteries of Northern Europe is presented, and it is argued that much more is involved than social differentiation.
Abstract: The well-known Mesolithic cemeteries of Northern Europe have long been viewed as evidence of developing social complexity in those regions in the centuries immediately before the Neolithic transition. These sites also had important symbolic connotations. This study uses new and more detailed analysis of the burial practices in one of these cemeteries to argue that much more is involved than social differentiation. Repeated burial in the densely packed site of Zvejnieki entailed large-scale disturbance of earlier graves, and would have involved recurrent encounters with the remains of the ancestral dead. The intentional use of older settlement material in the grave fills may also have signified a symbolic link with the past. The specific identity of the dead is highlighted by the evidence for clay face masks and tight body wrappings in some cases.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present new geo-archaeological perspectives on the Late Glacial and Early Holocene human occupation around a large palaeolake, the Moervaart palaeolaake (∼25 km 2 ).
TL;DR: Results show that while cranial shape reflects the population history differences between Mesolithic and Neolithic lineages, relative limb dimensions exhibit significant congruence with environmental variables such as latitude and temperature, even after controlling for geography and time.
Abstract: The Neolithic transition in Europe was a complex mosaic spatio-temporal process, involving both demic diffusion from the Near East and the cultural adoption of farming practices by indigenous hunter–gatherers. Previous analyses of Mesolithic hunter–gatherers and Early Neolithic farmers suggest that cranial shape variation preserves the population history signature of the Neolithic transition. However, the extent to which these same demographic processes are discernible in the postcranium is poorly understood. Here, for the first time, crania and postcranial elements from the same 11 prehistoric populations are analysed together in an internally consistent theoretical and methodological framework. Results show that while cranial shape reflects the population history differences between Mesolithic and Neolithic lineages, relative limb dimensions exhibit significant congruence with environmental variables such as latitude and temperature, even after controlling for geography and time. Also, overall limb size is found to be consistently larger in hunter–gatherers than farmers, suggesting a reduction in size related to factors other than thermoregulatory adaptation. Therefore, our results suggest that relative limb dimensions are not tracking the same demographic population history as the cranium, and point to the strong influence of climatic, dietary and behavioural factors in determining limb morphology, irrespective of underlying neutral demographic processes.
TL;DR: The role played by local communities in the process of Neolithisation in the Lower Rhine Area (5500-2500 cal BC) has been investigated in this article, showing that the successive Late Mesolithic, Swifterbant culture, Hazendonk group and Vlaardingen culture societies represent a continuous long-term tradition of inhabitation of the wetlands and their margins.
Abstract: The adoption of agriculture is one of the major developments in human history. Archaeological studies have demonstrated that the trajectories of Neolithisation in Northwest Europe were diverse. This book presents a study into the archaeology of the indigenous communities involved in the process of Neolithisation in the Lower Rhine Area (5500-2500 cal BC). It elucidates the role played by these in relation to their environmental context.
This work brings together a comprehensive array of excavated archaeological sites in the Lower Rhine Area and indicates that the successive Late Mesolithic, Swifterbant culture, Hazendonk group and Vlaardingen culture societies represent a continuous long-term tradition of inhabitation of the wetlands and their margins.
After demonstrating the existence of a diverse Mesolithic background to Neolithisation, the subsequent developments are studied by foregrounding the relationship between local communities and the dynamic wetland landscape. This points to long-term flexible behaviour and pragmatic choices in livelihood, food economy and mobility.
For the interpretation of Neolithisation this study emphasises the persistent traditions of the communities involved. New elements are shown to be attuned to existing hunter-gatherer practices. By documenting indications of the mentalite of the wetland inhabitants, it is demonstrated that their mindset remains essentially ‘Mesolithic’ for millennia.
TL;DR: In this paper, the problems with sampling materials and sampled contexts in the framework of radiocarbon dating of Mesolithic sites situated in generally dry, acid and bioturbated coversand deposits within north-western Europe are discussed.
Abstract: This paper discusses the problems with sampling materials and sampled contexts in the framework of radiocarbon dating of Mesolithic sites situated in generally dry, acid and bioturbated coversand deposits within north-western Europe. The case studies presented all relate to the coversand regions of northern Belgium and the Netherlands, two areas for which very large sets of radiocarbon dates performed on different organic components are currently available. The study points out that charred hazelnut shells from surface hearths and charcoal from hearth pits guarantee the most secure dating results, while the dating of calcined bones and food crusts from Final Mesolithic pottery so far remains problematic.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors dealt with the Neolithization process on a regional scale in SE Spain and focused on the Epipaleolithic-Early Neolithic transition in Murcia, Almeria, Granada and Malaga.
Abstract: This study deals with the Neolithization process on a regional scale in SE Spain. The narrow chronological and spatial focus on the Epipaleolithic-Early Neolithic transition in Murcia, Almeria, Granada and Malaga is a unique characteristic of this study.
10 lithic inventories and vessel units of five pottery assemblages of Epipaleolithic and Early Neolithic origin were recorded systematically in a database that is available in www.nespos.org associated with the DOI 10.12853/RESDB.NESPOS.0001. Attribute comparisons and selected statistical analyses are used to detect continuity or discontinuity in the assemblages and to determine the dominant active agents in the Neolithization process.
TL;DR: The Magdalenian culture-stratigraphic unit in Western Europe, despite being a construct of nineteenth-century prehistoric archeologists, does have reality as a continuous network of human inter-relationships, whose ecologically transcendent range expanded through the course of the Late Last Glacial, in many ways reminiscent of Braudel's histoire de la longueduree, in this case lasting some 9,000 calendar years.
Abstract: The Magdalenian culture-stratigraphic unit in Western Europe, despite being a construct of nineteenth-century prehistoric archeologists, does have reality as a continuous network of human inter-relationships, whose ecologically transcendent range expanded through the course of the Late Last Glacial, in many ways reminiscent of Braudel’s histoire de la longueduree—in this case lasting some 9,000 calendar years. At the scale of the moyenne duree, the Magdalenian underwent several reorganizations [represented by its Initial, Lower, Middle, Upper, Final, and Epi-Magdalenian (i.e., Azilian, Federmesser) stages]—with distinctly regional manifestations and inter-regional connections—that in part can be understood in light of environmental/resource changes and variations at the scales of millennia and natural regions. At the scale of the courte duree, we are dealing with the adaptations of local and regional hunter-gatherer bands and the peculiarities and vicissitudes of their circumstances measured by forager group territories and centuries. Numerous, diverse concrete archaeological manifestations of territories and inter-group contacts support the growing consensus about the social reality of the Magdalenian phenomenon and the changes and variations that characterized it within a range that ultimately stretched from Portugal to Poland during the last millennia of the Pleistocene. Here, the focus is on Cantabrian Spain as one of the core or source areas of the Magdalenian cultural tradition that arose out of the Solutrean experience some 20,000 calendar years ago (about a millennium later than in France) and that was intimately linked to the process of human recolonization of upland and northerly regions of western and ultimately central Europe during the course of Greenland Stadial 2 and early Greenland Interstadial 1. Finally, archaeological and paleobiological indicators clearly point to major breaks in human adaptations and ways of understanding the human place in the universe a few centuries after the onset of Holocene conditions in Vasco-Cantabria, i.e., the development of Mesolithic cultures about 11,000 calendar years ago.
TL;DR: In this article, a Hoabinhian stone tool assemblage and fauna were found associated with a burial from the Late Pleistocene up to 3000 BP near the painted rock-shelter of Ban Tha Si.
TL;DR: In this article, Pottery from the regions inhabited by Danubian societies has been found in a hunting-gathering context, a fact that sheds light on relations between local Late Mesolithic communities and early farmers.
Abstract: The appearance of the first farming groups on the North European Plain was the turning point for the Mesolithic foragers who had inhabited that region for almost 7000 years. Interrelations between these two very different communities are fascinating for archaeologists interested in the northern European Stone Age. Research at Dąbki in Poland provides elements for a discussion of the Neolithic transformation along the southern Baltic coast. Pottery from the regions inhabited by Danubian societies has been found in a hunting-gathering context (), a fact that sheds light on relations between local Late Mesolithic communities and early farmers. Imports from the Linear Pottery Culture, the Stroked Pottery Culture, the Lengyel Culture, and the Ertebolle Culture are found associated with Late Mesolithic layers, while pottery of the Bodrogkeresztur Culture is related with the local Funnel Beaker settlement. This imported pottery reflects long lasting contacts between Mesolithic and those Neolithic communi...
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the results of a study into the effectiveness of core sampling for discovering Palaeolithic and Mesolithic hunter-gatherer sites in the Netherlands and northwestern Belgium.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) and 14 C-dates from five inland dune sites with traces of Mesolithic activity in the Elbe-Jeetzel area (N-Germany) to prove that asynchronous events of aeolian sedimentation persisted during the Mesolithic, especially during the older Mesolithic around 9000a and the late Mesolithic from 7000a and 6000a.
TL;DR: In 2007, excavations at the late Mesolithic (Ertebolle) coastal site of Asnaes Havnemark recovered a wealth of flint, bone, and ceramic artefacts as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: In 2007, excavations at the late Mesolithic (Ertebolle) coastal site of Asnaes Havnemark recovered a wealth of flint, bone, and ceramic artefacts. A comprehensive analysis of the faunal remains resulted in over 50,000 identified specimens. Roe deer and gadids predominate, but there are a wide variety of other species represented. Stable isotope analyses of dog bones point to the importance of marine resources. Oxygen isotope analyses of otoliths indicate that fishing was conducted in multiple seasons of the year. Comparison with other late Mesolithic sites demonstrates that while generally the same species of animals were exploited everywhere, there are major differences in the relative abundances of species. The broad subsistence base available and flexibility in how it was exploited weaken arguments for a subsistence crisis brought on by environmental stresses as the causal mechanism for the adoption of domesticated plants and animals at the onset of the Neolithic.
TL;DR: The results of two brief excavation seasons (2008 and 2010) at Foxhole Cave, Gower, south Wales, placed them into the wider context of mid-Holocene Britain this article.
Abstract: This paper presents an overview of the results of two brief excavation seasons (2008 and 2010) at Foxhole Cave, Gower, south Wales, placing them into the wider context of mid-Holocene Britain. No prehistoric pottery was found and the few pieces of worked flint recovered are diagnostic of the Mesolithic period. Typically for the Carboniferous limestone caves of Gower, bone was well preserved, however, and though much of the material in the heavily disturbed upper metre or so of the deposits was modern sheep and rabbit, scattered fragments representing the remains of at least six humans were also recovered, of which two have been directly radiocarbon-dated using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS 14C) to the Late Mesolithic and two to the earlier Neolithic (the remaining two providing Romano-British and medieval dates). Their associated stable carbon and nitrogen isotope values indicate a significant difference in diet between the two periods (contrary to the results from an earlier excavation in 1997), with marine foods contributing around half of the protein for the Mesolithic individuals and little or none for the Neolithic individuals. The new results are consistent with those from Caldey Island, Pembrokeshire, some 30km to the west. The floor of the cave has still not been reached at around 2m depth; limited investigation of the lowermost levels has yielded a Pleistocene fauna (including reindeer, aurochs or bison and collared lemming) with dates back to approx 33,500 cal bc, though with no definite evidence for human activity so far. A small, dark-stained fragment of human cranium was recovered from what may be pre-Holocene levels, but this failed to produce sufficient collagen for dating. In addition to a marked dietary shift, the combined stable isotope and dating programme provides further support for an equally striking temporal gap of some two millennia between the Mesolithic and Neolithic use of caves for burial.
TL;DR: A detailed analysis of the classic harpoon and point typology presented by J.G.D. Clark (1936) in the context of a broader source base, encompassing finds from the entire Baltic zone is presented in this paper.
Abstract: The study catalogues all currently known finds of bone and antler harpoons and points associated with Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Protoneolithic culture in the southern Baltic zone, between the mouths of the Oder and Niemen rivers. It undertakes an analysis of the category in typological, chronological and cultural terms, taking into consideration results of recent paleogeographic investigations and research on the Stone Age in this region. An important element of this study are drawn plates of nearly all of the discussed objects as well as distribution maps. The author gives a critical analysis of the classic harpoon and point typology presented by J.G.D. Clark (1936) in the context of a broader source base, encompassing finds from the entire Baltic zone. A detailed morphological classification of harpoon barbs is one of the most important tools essential to this end.
TL;DR: The evidence for Late Mesolithic and Early Neolithic settlement comes predominantly from caves and rock-shelters in the Caput Adriae region of Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia as mentioned in this paper, where the Mesolithic-Neolithictransition and early farming adaptations of this region have been intensively debated but poorly re-searched.
Abstract: Straddling the modern political borders of Italy,Slovenia and Croatia, the region known as the CaputAdriae at the extreme northeastern end of the Adri-atic Sea comprises the narrow coastal plain aroundTrieste Bay, the 300-500 m high plateau of the Tri-este Karst (Slovene ‘Kras’) and the northern part ofthe Istrian peninsula. The Mesolithic-Neolithictransition and early farming adaptations of this re-gion have been intensively debated but poorly re-searched. The Caput Adriae is underlain mainly bycarbonate sedimentary rocks; and the evidence forLate Mesolithic and Early Neolithic settlementcomes predominantly from caves and rock-shelters.This chapter seeks to review that evidence and placeit in the wider regional context.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported on results from the Billasurgam Cave complex near Kurnool in southern India and concluded that the engraved diamond design was probably made by Mesolithic foragers.