Issue 391 - February 2023

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Editorial

Vol 97 Issue 391, 1-11
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New Book Chronicle

Vol 97 Issue 391, 258-267
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Research Articles

Research on Palaeolithic hunter-gatherer diet has focused on the consumption of animals. Evidence for the use of plant foods is comparatively limited but is rapidly expanding. The authors present an analysis of carbonised macro-remains of processed plants from Franchthi Cave in the Aegean Basin and Shanidar Cave in the north-west Zagros Mountains. Microscopic examination of the charred food remains reveals the use of pounded pulses as a common ingredient in cooked plant foods. The results are discussed in the context of the regional archaeobotanical literature, leading the authors to argue that plants with bitter and astringent tastes were key ingredients of Palaeolithic cuisines in South-west Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean.

Cooking in caves: Palaeolithic carbonised plant food remains from Franchthi and Shanidar

Ceren Kabukcu et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 12-28  |  Read for free | Share

During the northern European Mesolithic, new types of objects were ornamented with different geometric motifs. Many examples, however, are stray finds and their dating is poorly understood. The authors present new AMS radiocarbon dates for ornamented artefacts from Pomerania that contribute to an absolute chronology of Mesolithic art and allow for new consideration of connections between cultural groups in the western Baltic region. A baton, featuring an anthropomorphic figure, dates to the end of the Boreal period; three other objects date to the early Atlantic period, revealing a combination of regional and local innovations. The results demonstrate the value of absolute dating of stray finds for refining knowledge of wider cultural trends.

New radiocarbon dates for ornamented Mesolithic objects from north-west Poland: chronology and regional connections in the western Baltic region

Tomasz Płonka, Michał Adamczyk & Marcin Diakowski
Vol 97 Issue 391, 29-49  |  Read for free | Share

The earliest monumentality in Western Europe is associated with megalithic structures, but where did the builders of these monuments live? Here, the authors focus on west-central France, one of the earliest centres of megalithic building in Atlantic Europe, commencing in the mid fifth millennium BC. They report on an enclosure at Le Peu (Charente), dated to the Middle Neolithic (c. 4400 BC), and defined by a ditch with two ‘crab claw’ entrances and a double timber palisade flanked by two timber structures—possibly defensive bastions. Inside, timber buildings—currently the earliest known in the region—were possibly home to the builders of the nearby Tusson long mounds.

The emergence of monumental architecture in Atlantic Europe: a fortified fifth-millennium BC enclosure in western France

Vincent Ard et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 50-69  |  Read for free | Share

Amber was widely exchanged across prehistoric Europe and was transported long distances from primary sources on the Baltic and North Sea coasts. How did collection and working of amber develop and what were the effects of international exchange on local communities in Northern Europe? The authors present two recent, contrasting amber finds from Thy, northern Jutland: a cache of beads associated with the Early Neolithic Funnelbeaker Culture (4000–3300 BC); and evidence from a Late Bronze Age (1100–500 BC) non-elite settlement that suggests coastal amber collection was independent of elite control. Set within a review of amber's changing roles in prehistoric Thy, these finds evidence shifting local, regional and international connections.

New Early Neolithic and Late Bronze Age amber finds from Thy

Timothy Earle, Jens-Henrik Bech & Chiara Villa
Vol 97 Issue 391, 70-85 | Share

Excavated over two centuries ago, the Upton Lovell G2a ‘Wessex Culture’ burial has held a prominent place in research on Bronze Age Britain. In particular, was it the grave of a ‘shaman’ or a metalworker? We take a new approach to the grave goods, employing microwear analysis and scanning electron microscopy to map a history of interactions between people and materials, identifying evidence for the presence of Bronze Age gold on five artefacts, four for the first time. Advancing a new materialist approach, we identify a goldworking toolkit, linking gold, stone and copper objects within a chaîne opératoire, concluding that modern categorisations of these materials miss much of their complexity.

Materials in movement: gold and stone in process in the Upton Lovell G2a burial

Rachel J. Crellin et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 86-103  |  Read for free | Share

Ancient Egyptian art features many carefully observed depictions of wild animals and birds. A famous example is the late Eighteenth Dynasty (fourteenth-century BC) wall paintings of the Green Room in the North Palace at Amarna, where naturalistic depictions of birds feature prominently. Their taxonomic identity, however, is not resolved in all cases. Here, the authors revisit the facsimiles produced in the 1920s by Nina de Garis Davies. Mindful of previous works, taphonomy and the interplay between naturalistic observation and artistic licence, they employ ornithological resources to conduct a qualitative assessment and propose a parsimonious scheme of identifications, relating the results to long-standing questions concerning ecological and stylistic aspects in the artwork.

Pigeons and papyrus at Amarna: the birds of the Green Room revisited

Christopher M. Stimpson & Barry J. Kemp
Vol 97 Issue 391, 104-119  |  Read for free | Share

Bog body studies have focused on rich individual biographies, largely neglecting broader spatial and temporal trends. Here, the authors present the first large-scale overview of well-dated human remains from northern European mires, based on a database of 266 sites and more than 1000 bog mummies, bog skeletons and disarticulated/partial skeletal remains. Analysis demonstrates fluctuating depositions of human remains between the Early Neolithic and early modern times, significant and shifting spatial clustering, and variation in site characteristics (e.g. preservation, use frequency, cause of death). The results emphasise previously unrecognised activity phases and highlight issues with categorising motives, especially around ritual violence.

Bogs, bones and bodies: the deposition of human remains in northern European mires (9000 BC–AD 1900)

Roy van Beek et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 120-140  |  Read for free | Share

Music likely played an important role within prehistoric societies but can be challenging to study in the absence of evidence for musical instruments. Here, the authors present two deer antlers recovered from the early Metal Age site of Go O Chua in southern Vietnam. A detailed examination of the artefacts, including evidence for use-wear, combined with insights from ethnographic analogies, leads the authors to conclude that the artefacts were single-stringed musical instruments. At least 2000 years old, the Go O Chua artefacts would be the earliest-known examples of chordophones from the region and indicate a long musical tradition. Their identification gives impetus to archaeo-musicological research in Southeast Asia and beyond.

In search of a musical past: evidence for early chordophones from Vietnam

Fredeliza Z. Campos, Jennifer R. Hull & Vương Thu Hồng
Vol 97 Issue 391, 141-157  |  Read for free | Share

Many thousands of burials have been excavated from across the Roman world, documenting a variety of funerary practices and rites. Individual burials, however, sometimes stand out for their atypical characteristics. The authors report the discovery of a cremation burial from ancient Sagalassos that differs from contemporaneous funerary deposits. In this specific context, the cremated human remains were not retrieved but buried in situ, surrounded by a scattering of intentionally bent nails, and carefully sealed beneath a raft of tiles and a layer of lime. For each of these practices, textual and archaeological parallels can be found elsewhere in the ancient Mediterranean world, collectively suggesting that magical beliefs were at work.

Magical practices? A non-normative Roman imperial cremation at Sagalassos

Johan Claeys et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 158-175  |  Read for free | Share

During the late first millennium AD, the Bulgarian Empire emerged in the eastern Balkans on the doorstep of the Byzantine Empire. In a bid to reconcile with—and impress—its powerful neighbour, Tsar Simeon I selected the fortified site of Veliki Preslav as a new capital city. Through the ninth and tenth centuries AD, the city was developed into one of the largest cities of the early Middle Ages in Europe. A fortified Inner City of palaces, churches and state buildings was accompanied by a large defended Outer City. The authors present the results of a recent geophysical survey, revealing patterning in the spatial and socio-economic organisation of the urban landscape between the ninth and fourteenth centuries AD.

Into the Tsar's residence: geophysical survey of the early medieval Bulgarian capital of Veliki Preslav

Peter Milo et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 176-193  |  Read for free | Share

The Andes offers a particularly effective focus for an archaeology of mobility because their extreme topography compresses enormous vertical resource diversity across short horizontal distances. In this article, the authors combine findings from two large-scale archaeological studies of adjacent watersheds—the Nasca-Palpa Project and One River Project—to provide the necessary context in which to explore changing mobilities from the Archaic Period to the Inca Empire, and from the Pacific coast to the high Andes. Analyses of obsidian lithics and stable isotopes in human hair are used to argue that changing patterns of mobility offer a new way of defining the ‘Horizons’ that have long dominated concepts of periodisation here.

Beyond Inca roads: archaeological mobilities from the high Andes to the Pacific in southern Peru

David G. Beresford-Jones et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 194-212 | Share

Some human settlements endure for millennia, while others are founded and abandoned within a few decades or centuries. The reasons for variation in the duration of site occupation, however, are rarely addressed. Here, the authors introduce a new approach for the analysis of settlement longevity or persistence. Using seven regional case studies comprising both survey and excavation data, they demonstrate how the median persistence of individual settlements varies widely within and among regions. In turn, this variability is linked to the effects of environmental potential. In seeking to identify the drivers of settlement persistence in the past, it is suggested that archaeologists can contribute to understanding of the sustainability and resilience of contemporary cities.

A systematic approach for studying the persistence of settlements in the past

Katherine A. Crawford et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391, 213-230  |  Read for free | Share

Discussion

Research on archaeological knowledge production emphasises the contingent nature of understandings of the past. In practice, however, levels of uncertainty and conjecture can easily become less than obvious in interpretations, perhaps especially visual ones. The authors interrogate multiple textual and visual accounts of a Viking-Age burial to demonstrate how selection processes—what to portray or omit—highlight the contextual nature of the knowledge claims in these images. Arguing that the circulation of reconstructions shorn of textual nuance leads to misperceptions, the authors call for transparency in the creation of these images. Rather than definitive depictions of archaeological fact, these reconstructions offer tools for archaeologists and the public to think with.

Archaeological knowledge production: reading mortuary reconstructions

Marianne Moen, Neil Price & Unn Pedersen
Vol 97 Issue 391, 231-240 | Share

Book Reviews

2022

Human prehistory: exploring the past to understand the future

Deborah Barsky
Reviewed by Michael J. Walker
Vol 97 Issue 391, 241-243
2022

More Than Shelter from the Storm: Hunter-Gatherer Houses and the Built Environment

Brian N. Andrews and Danielle A. Macdonald (Ed.)
Reviewed by Ashley Lemke
Vol 97 Issue 391, 243-245
2022

Understanding Chipped Stone Tools

Brian Hayden
Reviewed by Anders Högberg
Vol 97 Issue 391, 245-247
2022

Archaeology and the genetic revolution in European prehistory

Kristian Kristiansen
Reviewed by Ian Armit
Vol 97 Issue 391, 247-249
2021

History of the Caucasus: at the crossroads of empires

Christoph Baumer
Reviewed by Norman Hammond
Vol 97 Issue 391, 249-251
2021

Hadrian's Wall: exploring its past to protect its future

Marta Alberti & Katie Mountain (ed.)
Reviewed by Richard Hingley
Vol 97 Issue 391, 251-253
2022

Tea on the terrace: hotels and Egyptologists’ social networks, 1885–1925

Kathleen Sheppard
Reviewed by Hélène Maloigne
Vol 97 Issue 391, 253-255
2022

Archaeology, Heritage, and Wellbeing: Authentic, Powerful, and Therapeutic Engagement with the Past

Paul Everill and Karen Burnell (ed.)
Reviewed by Timothy Darvill
Vol 97 Issue 391, 255-257

New Book Chronicle

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New Book Chronicle

Claire Nesbitt
Vol 97 Issue 391, 258-267 | Share

Project Gallery

The Tracking Pleistocene Human Occupations in the East of Iran project was initiated with two field seasons in 2020 and 2022. The authors present the results of this fieldwork, which identified 176 Palaeolithic localities, demonstrating the presence of Lower Palaeolithic and Middle Palaeolithic occupations in the Ferdows-Sarayan-Qaen plains.

Tracking Pleistocene occupation on the Eastern Iranian Plateau: preliminary results

Ali Sadraei et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share

The authors present preliminary results from a new research project based in Jebel Shaqadud, Sudan. Their findings highlight the potential for this region's archaeological record to expand our understanding of the adaptation strategies used by human groups in arid north-east African environments away from rivers and lakes during the Holocene. Furthermore, they present exceptionally early radiocarbon dates that push postglacial human occupation in the eastern Sahel back to the twelfth millennium BP.

The Shaqadud Archaeological Project (Sudan): exploring prehistoric cultural adaptations in the Sahelian hinterlands

Ladislav Varadzin et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share

The transition to the Neolithic on the East European Plain was a very different process to the Western model, featuring a long-lasting hunter-gatherer economy and late introduction of agriculture. The authors present results from multiproxy research on a 13.5m-deep core of organic deposits from the Serteya mire as part of an international research project to understand human-environment relations in the Western Dvina Lakeland.

A deep history within a small wetland: 13 000 years of human-environment relations on the East European Plain

Piotr Kittel et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share

The authors report on new discoveries from Sanxingdui in south-west China. The multidisciplinary approach used at Sanxingdui has enriched the theory and methodology of field archaeology and sets a precedent for future scientific excavations.

New discoveries at the Sanxingdui Bronze Age site in south-west China

Yingfu Li et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share

Excavation at Mogou, a Bronze Age cemetery containing over 1700 burials and 6000 individuals, has revealed a diverse range of multiple burials. Building on this dataset, the Mogou Multidisciplinary Investigation Project aims to explore connections between kinship, burial space and social organisation in Bronze Age north-west China.

The Mogou Multidisciplinary Investigation Project: insights into the kinship and social organisation of a Bronze Age population in north-west China

Xiaoying Ren et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share

The authors present the results of a drone-based airborne LiDAR survey of the fifth century AD Tsukuriyama mounded tomb group in Okayama Prefecture, Japan, revealing the relationship between tomb building and the surrounding landscape during Japan's period of ancient state formation.

LiDAR survey of the fifth-century Tsukuriyama mounded tomb group in Japan

Jun Mitsumoto et al.
Vol 97 Issue 391  |  Read for free | Share