Editura Cetatea de Scaun - de 22 de ani facem istorie

FROM HUNTER-GATHERERS TO FARMERS. Human adaptations at the end of the Pleistocene and the first part of the Holocene. Papers in Honour of Clive Bonsall

ISBN: 978-606-537-725-7
An apariție: 2024
Nr. pagini: 481
Nr. planșe: e-book
Format: 290x205 mm

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It is difficult to capture one’s life in a few words, a few photographs or even a book. The papers in the present volume will hopefully reflect a part of Clive Bonsall’s scientific interests during a career that has started some 45 years ago. Their diversity is impressive: from radiocarbon dating, environmental changes, human-environment interactions, funerary behaviour, to paleogenetics and stable isotopes, reconstruction of ancient diets and obsidian sourcing, most of them in close connection to the hunter-gatherer and first farmer communities of Europe. His studies stretched over a large geographical area, focusing recently mainly around the Balkans and the neighbouring regions. He has conducted fieldwork in Britain, Scotland, Romania and Slovenia, edited 9 books and published over 160 papers, book-chapters, notes, as well as book and paper reviews. His main publications include: “The Mesolithic in Europe” (1989), “The Human Use of Caves” (1997), “The Iron Gates in Prehistory” (2008), “Submerged Prehistory” (2011) and “Not Just for Show: The Archaeology of Beads, Beadwork and Personal Ornaments” (2017).

His substantial work in southeastern Europe is reflected by his long-standing collaboration and friendship with many Romanian and Bulgarian archaeologists, and has received due recognition: Clive Bonsall is an Honorary Member of both the “Vasile Pârvan” Institute of Archaeology in Bucharest and the National Institute of Archaeology with Museum in Sofia. His contribution to the archaeology of the Iron Gates has earned him the recognition of the Serbian archaeologists working in the area. His many other research interests and personal collaborations are also reflected in the present volume.

We are grateful to all our contributors: colleagues and friends, new and old, former students and collaborators whose archaeological interests met Clive’s if only briefly. We were happy to see that so many of us were able to mobilize in such a short time. We would like to thank all those who answered our call and at a time when every minute of our professional lives is carefully planned in advance, helped us put together this volume in less than a year. They have endured and complied with our constant deadline reminders and requests, checked and re-checked their manuscripts in record times, gracefully complying with the comments and suggestions from the reviewers, and were most patient with our editorial work.

Each paper was submitted to a double reviewing. We would like to also thank our colleagues from various disciplines who accepted to anonymously review the contributions. Their hard and serious work significantly improved the overall content of the volume.

The outcome has exceeded our most optimistic expectation: a volume that geographically covers almost the entire European continent, from Britain to Russia and Greece and touches on most important issues of hunter-gather adaptions through time. A volume brought together by chronological landmarks (the end of the Pleistocene and the beginning of the Holocene) and geographical areas but also by common approaches to issues such as human-animal interactions, exploitation and use of raw materials, and subsistence strategies.

We chose to organize the papers on three main sections, while within the respective theme they follow in chronological succession. The archaeology of the Iron Gates opens the volume, given Clive Bonsall’s substantial contribution to the local early prehistory. The eight contributions cover a large range of subjects, from physical anthropology (Andrei Soficaru), re-interpretation of earlier excavations and the subsequent collections (Adina Boroneanț), stone artefacts (Dragana Antonović, Vidan Dimić, Andrej Starović and Dušan Borić) to the study of faunal remains and subsequent paleo-dietary issues (Adrian Bălășescu, Adina Boroneanț and Valentin Radu; Dragana Filipović, Jelena Jovanović and Dragana Rančić; Ivana Živaljević, Vesna Dimitrijević and Sofija Stefanović), and osseous industries (Monica Mărgărit and Adina Boroneanț; Selena Vitezović). These studies illustrate the still immense research potential of the Iron Gates region despite the fact that most of the sites have been flooded many decades ago.

During the editing of the volume it became obvious that while some of the contributions focused on the evidence from a certain site, others were more of a regional synthesis. This latter section begins with a most interesting paper bringing together world history and underwater archaeology (Jonathan Benjamin and Geoff Bailey). The following nine articles deal with subjects such as social inequalities seen through the study of burial practices (Judith M. Grünberg), lifeways, adaptations and subsistence strategies of the early prehistoric communities (Agathe Reingruber; Mihael Budja; Annie Brown and Haskel Greenfield; Kenneth Ritchie), raw materials acquisition and exploitation (Tomasz Płonka, Maria Gurova, Eva David), exploitation, management and trade of “exotic” goods (Vassil Nikolov).

The nine papers focusing on individual sites present case studies that illustrate the nature of the current research, the rich opportunities offered by the growing range of scientific techniques and their applications to existing collections. This series of papers starts at Zemunica Cave on the coast of the Eastern Adriatic (Siniša Radović and Ankica Oros Sršen), explores the Mesolithic occupations at Malga Rondenetto (Paolo Biagi, Elisabetta Starnini and Renato Nisbet) and Grotta dell’Edera (Barbara Voytek) in Italy, the Mesolithic ornamented weapons of Motala in Sweden (Lars Larsson and Fredrik Molin), ending this Mesolithic journey among the shell middens on the western coast of Scotland (Catriona Pickard). The transition to the Neolithic happens among the beaver tools at Zamojste 2 in Russia (Olga Lozovskaya, Charlotte Leduc and Louis Chaix). The Neolithic Age finds us further south into Bulgaria, exploring the pitfields of Sarnevo (Krum Bacvarov and John Gorczyk) and the gold of Varna (Tanya Dzhanfezova), while during the Bronze Age roe deer hunting is resurrected at Paks-Gyapa in Hungary (László Bartosiewicz and Erika Gál).

The volume presents altogether new results in recent research and new information resulted from the study of old collections. We also hope it points out directions for future research.

It is with great joy that we present Clive Bonsall this volume, as a token of both our appreciation and friendship, for his contributions to the Early Prehistory of Europe in general, and of Southeastern Europe in special.

The Editors

CONTENTS

Živaljević, Vesna Dimitrijević, Sofija Stefanović -Faunal remains from Kula, a Mesolithic-Neolithic site at the exit of the Danube Gorges (Serbia) / 113

Dragana Antonović, Vidan Dimić, Andrej Starović, Dušan Borić Ground stone artefacts from Aria Babi / 135

Selena Vitezović The Early Neolithic osseous industry in the Iron Gates region / 149

REGIONAL STUDIES / 167

Jonathan Benjamin, Geoff Bailey Coastal adaptations and submerged landscapes: where world prehistory meets underwater archaeology / 169

Judith M. Grünberg Women and men in Mesolithic burials: inequalities in early postglacial hunter-gatherer-fisher societies / 185

Agathe Reingruber Foragers, Fishers and Farmers in the Aegean (12,000–6000 cal BC) / 203

Tomasz Płonka Ornamented hunting weapons from the Late Palaeolithic in the southern Baltic Basin / 217

Éva David No Maglemosian bone tools in Mesolithic Norway so far! / 229

Mihael Budja Ceramic technology inventions in Europe and Asia / 245

Maria Gurova Geometric microliths from Holocene sequences in Bulgaria / 273

Annie Brown, Haskel Greenfield Deer Season: hunting seasonality during the Neolithic in the central Balkans / 295

Vassil Nikolov Fortified settlements in the valleys of the Rivers Provadiyska, Golyama Kamchia, and Luda Kamchia (northeast Bulgaria) in the context of Chalcolithic economy / 317

Kenneth Ritchie Mixing copper and water: the aquatic focus of Chalcolithic Romania / 329

SITE STUDIES / 339

Siniša Radović, AnkicaOros Sršen Subsistence change in the eastern Adriatic hinterland during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene: Archaeozoology of Zemunica Cave (Croatia) / 341

Paolo Biagi, Elisabetta Starnini, Renato Nisbet Malga Rondeneto: A high altitude Sauveterrian camp in the Central Italian Alps and the Boreal Mesolithic settlement pattern in the region / 367

Barbara Voytek A Sense of Place: the Mesolithic Occupation of Grotta dell’Edera, Northern Italy / 385

Lars Larsson, Fredrik Molin Symbols in the Late Mesolithic. Ornaments on bone and antler from Strandvägen, Motala, in Central Sweden / 395

Catriona Pickard Prehistoric Shellfish Exploitation in Coastal Western Scotland: the shell assemblages from Carding Mill Bay / 409

Olga Lozovskaya, Charlotte Leduc, Louis Chaix Beaver mandible tools during the Late Mesolithic and the Early Neolithic at Zamostje 2 (the Upper Volga region, Russia) / 425

Krum Bacvarov, John Gorczyk The ritual package at the Neolithic pit field of Sarnevo, south-central Bulgaria / 439

Tanya Dzhanfezova The importance of being earliest: the AMS dating of the Late Chalcolithic Varna I / 453

László Bartosiewicz, Erika Gál Resurrecting roe deer: skeletal weight ratios at prehistoric Paks–Gyapa, Hungary / 465

From hunter-gatherers to farmers

Human adaptations at the end of the Pleistocene and the first part of the Holocene

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