Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Neolithic boom-to-bust
Friday, 25 April 2014
Ancient DNA study provides additional insight into Neolithic transition in Scandinavia
Friday, 4 April 2014
Fishing was rapidly abandoned by first farmers in Britain and Ireland
Monday, 24 March 2014
Did Neolithic switch to agriculture drive selection for lighter skin colour in Europeans?
Monday, 28 October 2013
Mesolithic hunter-gatherers persisted in Central Europe for 2,000 years after arrival of farmers
Farming spread across Europe from Southwest Asia between 6500 and 4000 BC, but interactions between the indigenous Mesolithic hunter-gatherers and incoming Neolithic farmers are poorly understood. The general view is that hunter-gathering disappeared soon after the arrival of agriculture, but whether the hunter-gatherers took up farming themselves or simply died out remains uncertain.
In order to investigate relationships between foragers and farmers, researchers examined Mesolithic and Neolithic samples from Blätterhöhle, a cave site near Hagen in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany (Bollongino, et al., 2013). The cave contained the remains of around 450 Neolithic and Mesolithic individuals. It is likely that it was a burial ground, and that these individuals were deposited there deliberately. Radiocarbon dating has revealed two phases of occupation: a Mesolithic occupation from 9210 to 8340 BC, and a Late Neolithic occupation from 3986 to 2918 BC.
Stable isotope analysis and ancient mitochondrial DNA extraction was carried out on the bones and teeth of 29 individuals. Isotopic ratios of sulphur, nitrogen and carbon in human remains can provide an insight into the diet of an individual while they were alive. Mitochondrial DNA can trace maternal ancestry.
Of the 29 individuals sampled, 25 yielded usable mitochondrial DNA; five from the Mesolithic occupation and 20 from the Late Neolithic occupation. The five Mesolithic-era individuals all belonged to mitochondrial haplogroup U, in common with other pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers of central, eastern and northern Europe. More unexpectedly, twelve of the Neolithic-era individuals also belonged to haplogroup U. This haplogroup is rare among Late Neolithic farmers, and suggests a surprising persistence of Mesolithic maternal ancestry. The remaining eight individuals belonged to typical Neolithic haplogroups.
Stable isotope analysis indicated the existence of three distinct groups. The first, comprising the Mesolithic-era individuals, subsisted on a diet of wild foods typical of that found at other inland Mesolithic sites. The second group comprised Late Neolithic individuals with a diet of domesticated animals typical of German Neolithic sites. The third group was also from the Late Neolithic, but diet was unusual: low in plant and animal protein and high in freshwater fish.
The members of this third group all belonged to mitochondrial haplogroup U, whereas members of the contemporary second group were a mixture of Mesolithic and Neolithic haplogroups. Thus it appears that a group of fisher-foragers were living alongside a group of farmers in the fourth millennium BC, which is around 2,000 years after agriculture reached central Europe. That both groups used the Blätterhöhle cave site at the same time indicates that they were near-neighbours.
Ethnographic data shows that such communities do live side by side, commonly exchanging food; for example cereals for fish. While forager women do marry into farming communities, the reverse is very rare as women from farming communities regard it as marrying down. The mitochondrial results are consistent with the ethnographic picture: no Neolithic haplogroups were found among the fisher-foragers; but the Mesolithic haplogroup U was present among the farmers.
It is unclear just how prevalent such forager communities were in Late Neolithic Europe, but the Blätterhöhle results are the strongest indication yet that such genetically-distinct communities persisted long after the arrival of farming. The ultimate fate of these communities remains uncertain. The authors of the study suggest that some groups may have eventually changed over to farming, although it has been suggested that incoming farmers would rapidly appropriate all the prime farmland, making such a switch problematic (Bellwood, 2005).
References:
1. Bollongino, R. et al., 2000 Years of Parallel Societies in Stone Age Central Europe. Science 342, 479-481 (2013).
2. Bellwood, P., First Farmers (Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, 2005).
Thursday, 28 February 2013
Isotope analysis documents transition to agriculture in the Balkans
The Iron Gates are a series of gorges situated on the Danube between the Carpathian Mountains and the Dinaric Alps. In the early millennia after the last Ice Age, the region supported a number of sedentary or near-sedentary Mesolithic communities. At the sites of Lepenski Vir, Padina and Vlasac, fishers exploited migratory sturgeon, catfish, carp and other species (Borić, 2002).
There is no evidence for long-distance interactions during the early Mesolithic period from 9500 to 7400 BC, but these increased during the period from 7400 to 6200 BC. Archaeological evidence is based on the presence of the marine gastropods Columbella rustica and Cyclope neritea, which must have come from coastal regions more than 400 km (250 miles) away. This period was characterised by long-lasting and evidently successful communities. A large number of burials have been excavated, with bodies typically in the extended supine position characteristic of Mesolithic inhumations (Borić & Price, 2013).
The period between 6200 and 6000 BC saw a Mesolithic to Neolithic transition in the region, and was characterised by cultural hybridity (Borić & Price, 2013). At Lepenski Vir, remarkable trapezoidal, semi-subterranean, flat-roofed dwellings were constructed on the banks of the Danube (Borić, 2002). They varied in size from 5 to 30 sq. m. (54 to 320 sq. ft.), with the wider ends facing the river. The floors were dug 0.5 to 1.5 m (1 ft. 8 in. to 3 ft. 3 in.) into the terraced slopes of the river bank, and were surfaced with reddish limestone plaster. Inside, elongated pits lined with limestone blocks served as hearths (Mithen, 1994; Borić, 2002). Many houses contained burials, although burials were also placed outside houses (Radovanovic, 2000). Human/fish anthropomorphic sculptures carved from boulders were also found in many of the houses. These have been interpreted as evidence of a belief system characterised by a totemic relationship between humans and the fish that were so vital to their subsistence economy (Borić, 2005). In addition to these indigenous elements, Neolithic elements including pottery and polished stone axes appeared at Lepenski Vir (Borić & Price, 2013).
At this stage, the lack of domesticated animals at suggests that subsistence patterns remained unchanged. Mortuary practices were still characterised by typical Mesolithic extended supine burials during this period. However, the Early Neolithic site of Ajmana, in the downstream area of the gorges, was contemporary with these indigenous forager communities. By 6000 BC, further changes were evident in the region with the first appearance of crouched/flexed burials characteristic of the Neolithic period. The trapezoidal buildings of Lepenski Vir were replaced by more typical Neolithic constructions, and there was an increase in the number of settlements across the region as a whole (Borić & Price, 2013).
In total, over 500 graves have been excavated from the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic periods in the Danubian Iron Gates, and stable isotope analysis of the remains has provided considerable insight into the transition to agriculture in the region. Dietary data inferred from carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis of bone collagen suggests that after around 6200 BC, there was a shift from the Mesolithic reliance on the locally-abundant fish to a cereal-based diet. Strontium isotope data from dental enamel indicate that at the same time, burials of non-local first-generation migrants increased significantly. These burials are predominantly of the crouched/flexed type. Notably, 87Sr/86Sr ratios of these migrants fall both above and below local values, suggesting that they originated from at least two geologically-distinct regions. The dating of remains suggests that they might have arrived in several waves (Borić & Price, 2013).
Paradoxically, it appears that during the earliest stages of the Neolithic in southeastern Europe, Neolithic farmers were more mobile than the indigenous foragers, who remained tied to their Danubian fishing niche. The data from Lepenski Vir shows that during the transitional period, more nonlocal women than men were buried at the site. The suggestion is that women came to the site from Neolithic communities as part of an ongoing social exchange. At the same time, the numbers of Neolithic-type artefacts at the site testify to an increasing Neolithic presence in the region, and the Mesolithic way of life came under growing pressure. The period of co-existence lasted for two centuries between 6200 and 6000 BC, but in the centuries thereafter the foragers were completely absorbed into the farming communities and their way of life finally vanished (Borić & Price, 2013).
References:
1. Borić, D., The Lepenski Vir conundrum: reinterpretation of the Mesolithic and Neolithic sequences in the Danube Gorges. Antiquity 76 (294), 1026–1039 (2002).
2. Borić, D. & Price, D., Strontium isotopes document greater human mobility at the start of the Balkan Neolithic. PNAS 110 (9), 3298–3303 (2013).
3. Mithen, S., in Prehistoric Europe, edited by Cunliffe, B. (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1994), pp. 79-135.
4. Radovanovic, I., Houses and burials at Lepenski Vir. European Journal of Archaeology 3 (3), 330-349 (2000).
5. Borić, D., Body Metamorphosis and Animality: Volatile Bodies and Boulder Artworks from Lepenski Vir. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 15 (1), 35–69 (2005).
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
The Ages of Man
The familiar terms “Stone Age”, “Bronze Age” and “Iron Age” are part of the so-called Three Age system, introduced by the Danish archaeologist Christian Jurgensen Thomsen in 1819 when he was curator of the collection of antiquities that subsequently became the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen. Thomsen was looking for a simple and logical system by which to arrange the collection which in common with those of other museums was in a chaotic state, overrun with prehistoric artefacts from all over the world. Thomsen was not the first to think of applying tool-making materials as a basis for classifying prehistoric cultures, although he was the first to actually do so. Thomsen lacked any means of dating his artefacts, but correctly guessed that stone had preceded bronze, which in turn had preceded iron. At the time – forty years before Darwin’s Origin of the Species – few suspected the true antiquity of mankind, with many still believing that the Earth was just 6,000 years old. Although the Scottish geologist Charles Hutton and others had begun to call this figure into question, in the early 19th Century it was still widely accepted. As far back as 1860s, Thomsen’s original scheme was beginning to look lopsided and in 1865 the archaeologist Sir John Lubbock, a friend of Charles Darwin, published Pre-historic Times, which was probably the most influential archaeological textbook of the 19th Century. In it he introduced the terms “Palaeolithic” (Old Stone Age) and “Neolithic” (New Stone Age). We now know that the Palaeolithic encompasses all but a tiny fraction of human prehistory, beginning approximately 2.5 million years ago with the emergence of the first members of Genus Homo – i.e. the first human beings. Accordingly the Palaeolithic is in turn divided into Lower, Middle and Upper. The Lower/Middle transition is taken to be the point at which Mode 3 industries enter the archaeological record such as the predominantly Neanderthal Mousterian culture, at very roughly 300,000 years ago. The Middle/Upper transition, approximately 40,000 years ago, is the point at which unequivocal evidence for modern human behaviour is found. In Africa the terms Early, Middle and Late Stone Age, or ESA, MSA and LSA respectively, are preferred, but the LSA also encompasses the Neolithic and Bronze Age as neither metallurgy nor agriculture reached sub-Saharan Africa until Iron Age times. To avoid confusion, I shall use only the term “Palaeolithic”, with its sub-divisions occurring at different times in different parts of the world. Such a scheme is generally used for later prehistory and I see no reason not to use it here also. The division between the Palaeolithic and the Neolithic is now taken to be the Pleistocene/Holocene boundary, that is to say the end of the last ice age, at around 11,550 years ago. This is somewhat illogical division, equating a purely geological change to a system based on technology. Agriculture was independently adopted in several parts of the world and spread outwards from these nuclear zones, taking many millennia to reach some places, and necessitating the introduction of another division, the Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) for regions where hunter gathering persisted. Conversely in parts of the world where proto-agriculture was practiced in late Pleistocene times, such as the Levant, the term Epipalaeolithic is used. The transition from Neolithic to Bronze Age is equally ill-defined - there is generally a transitional period where stone and native copper tools are in mixed use; this transitional period is referred to variously as Chalcolithic, Eneolithic or simply Copper Age. This transition began at different times in different parts of the world, and was of different duration – the Copper Age began earlier in the Middle East, but in Europe the transition to the fully-fledged Bronze Age was more rapid. The working of iron begins around 1200 BC in India, the Middle East and Greece, but again took time to spread to other parts of the world. The Iron Age continues on into historical times, not ending in Northern Europe until the Middle Ages. This does to all intents and purposes give us a nine-age system: | |||||
Table 1.0: The career of Mankind (YA = Years Ago) | |||||
Archaeological/ Geological Time period | Events | ||||
Miocene (26m - 5m YA) | Proconsul (27m-17m YA) | ||||
Pliocene (5.0m – 1.64m YA) | Ardipithecus ramidus (5m – 4.2m YA) Australopithecus anamensis (4.2m – 3.9m YA) A. afarensis (4.0m 3.0m YA) A. africanus (3.3m – 2.5m YA) A. Garhi () Paranthropus aethiopicus (2.5m – 2.4m YA) P. robustus (2.4m – 1.2m YA) P. boisei (2.3m – 1.2m YA) | ||||
Lower Palaeolithic (2.4m – 200,000 YA) | 2.4m YA. Earliest true humans appear in Africa, though apparently sympatric with later “robust” australopithecines (Paranthropus). Now believed that early fossil hominids represent at least two synchronous (though not sympatric) human species, Homo habilis (brain size 590-690 cc) and Homo rudolfensis (750 cc). It is not known which if either was ancestral to later types. Tools: Mode 1 Oldowan (2.4m – 1.5 m YA) flakes and choppers. Mode 2 Acheulian (1.4m – 100,000 YA) handaxes and cleavers. | ||||
Lower Pleistocene (1.64m – 900,000 YA) Middle Pleistocene (900,000 – 127,000 YA) | 1.9m YA. Homo ergaster (brain size 700-850 cc) appears in Africa; migrates to Far East; migrants now widely regarded as becoming a separate species, Homo erectus (orig. both classed as erectus). 500,000 YA (poss. as early as 1.0m YA). Use of fire. 800,000 YA. Homo Antecessor. Controversial taxon known only from Atapuerca in Northern Spain, believed by some to be the common ancestor of both modern man and the Neanderthals. 500,000 YA. Larger-brained (1,200 cc) and bigger-boned hominids are found in the fossil record in Africa, Asia and Europe. Traditionally referred to as “archaic Homo sapiens” but Homo heidelbergensis now favoured. Other types have been proposed such as Homo rhodesiensis and H. helmei. It’s all very confusing! | ||||
250,000 YA. Homo neanderthalensis “the Neanderthals” appear in Europe, possibly descended from Homo heidelbergensis. They later spread to the Middle East. 250,000 – 35,000 YA. Mousterian culture in Europe. | |||||
Middle Palaeolithic (200,000 – 45,000 YA) Late Pleistocene (127,000 – 11,600 YA) | Tools: Mode 3. (from 200,000 YA) flaking of prepared cores. Increasing use of the Levallois method to prepare cores, though this method was also used in late Acheulian times. 160,000 YA. Earliest near-anatomically modern humans, Homo sapiens idaltu, Herto, Ethiopia. 150,000 YA. Birth of putative “mitochondrial Eve” in East Africa. 100,000 YA. Homo sapiens in Israel (Skhul and Qafzeh). 50-60,000 YA. H. sapiens in Australia (Lake Mungo). | ||||
Upper Palaeolithic (45,000 – 11,600 YA) | 43,000 YA. H. sapiens reach Europe. Tools: Mode 4 (narrow blades struck from prepared cores). 35-29,000 YA. Châtelperronian culture, central and south-western France, final phase of Neanderthal industry. 34-23,000 YA. Aurignacian culture in Europe and south-west Asia. 32,000 YA. Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc cave paintings, southern France. 28,000 YA. Last Neanderthals die out. 28-22,000 YA. Gravettian culture, Dordogne, France. “Venus” figurines. 21-17,000 YA. Solutrean culture, France and Spain. 20-18,000 YA. Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), maximum glacier extent of last Ice Age. 16,500 YA. Lascaux cave paintings, Dordogne, France. 15-11,600 YA. Magdelanian culture in western Europe, final European Palaeolithic culture. 15,000-12,900 YA. Bølling-Allerød interstadial. 12,900 YA. Beginning of the Younger Dryas stadial. 12,000 YA. Jōmon culture in Japan, first use of pottery. | ||||
Epipalaeolithic (20,000 – 11,600 YA) | Ohalo II (20-19,000 YA) Natufian culture (14,000-11,600 YA) in the Levant. | ||||
Holocene Mesolithic (11,600 YA until adoption of agriculture) | 11,600 YA. Last Ice Age ends. 11.6-6,000 YA. Hunter-gathering persists in many parts of the world. | ||||
Neolithic (11,600 – 6,500 YA and later in various parts of the world) | 11,600 YA. Rapid transition to agriculture in Middle East and Anatolia. Tools: Mode 5 (microliths). 9,200 YA Catalhoyuk – very large Neolithic settlement in Anatolia. 9,000 YA. Beginning of the “Wave of Advance” – expansion of proto Indo-European farmers from Anatolia. 9,500 YA. Çatal Höyük, Anatolia, apparently no more than a very large village. 8,500 YA. As sea levels rise, Britain becomes an island. | ||||
Chalcolithic (6,500 – 4,000 YA in various parts of the world) | Copper and stone tools in mixed use. 6,500 – 3,500 YA. The age of the great megaliths in Europe. 5,100 – 4,000 YA. Construction of Stonehenge. | ||||
Bronze Age (5,300 – 2,700 YA in various parts of the world) | 4,500 YA. Construction of the pyramids in Egypt. 5,300-2,700 YA. Indus Valley civilization, India. 4,700-3,450 YA. Minoan civilization, Crete. 3,600-2,100 YA. Mycenaean civilization, Greece. 2,200 YA. Mediterranean Bronze Age collapse. | ||||
Iron Age (1800 BC into historical times) | 1800 BC. First working of iron, in India. 800-450 BC. Hallstatt culture, Central Europe. 450 BC. La Tene culture. AD 43. Romans invade and conquer Britain. | ||||
Taxonomy Within Class Mammalia (the mammals) humans are grouped with apes, monkeys and prosimians (lemurs, lorises, etc) within the order Primates. The term is due to Linnaeus, representing his view that humanity sat firmly at the top of creation’s tree (the self-styled Prince of Botany was also responsible for the term “mammal”, reflecting his now quite fashionable views about breast-feeding). | |||||
Table 2.0 Family Hominidae (The Hominids) | |||||
Species | Av. Brain size/cc | Dates known/years ago | Distribution | ||
Pongo pygmaeus(Orang-utan) | 400 | Present day | Sumatra, Borneo | ||
Gorilla gorilla (Gorilla) | 500 | Present day | central and west Africa | ||
Pan trogladytes (Chimpanzee) | 400 | Present day | central and west Africa | ||
Pan paniscus (Bonobo) | 400 | Present day | DR Congo | ||
Ardipithecus ramidus | 400 – 500 | 5.8m – 4.4m | |||
Australopithecus anamensis | 400 – 500 | 5.0m – 4.2m | |||
A. afarensis | 400 – 500 | 4.0m - 3.0m | |||
A. africanus | 400 – 500 | 3.3m – 2.5m | |||
A. garhi | 400 – 500 | 3.0m – 2.0m | |||
Parantropus aethiopicus | 400 – 500 | 2.5m – 2.4m | |||
P. robustus | 410 – 530 | 2.4m – 1.2m | |||
P. boisei | 410 – 530 | 2.3m – 1.2m | |||
Homo habilis | 500 – 650 | 2.4m – 1.6m | |||
H. rudolfensis | 600 – 800 | 2.0m – 1.6m | |||
H. ergaster | 750 – 1,250 | 1.9m – 1.5m | |||
H. erectus | 750 – 1,250 | 1.8m – 400,000 (poss. later) | |||
H. antecessor | >1,000? | 800,000 | Atapuerca, Spain | ||
H. heidelbergensis | 1,100 – 1,400 | 500,000 – 250,000 | |||
H. neanderthalensis | 1,200 – 1,750 | 250,000 – 30,000 | Europe, Middle East | ||
H. sapiens idaltu | 1,200 – 1,700 | 160,000 | Herto, Ethiopia | ||
H. sapiens sapiens | 1,200 – 1,700 | From 115,000 | Worldwide | ||
© Christopher Seddon 2008