The Spread of the Neolithic in the South East European Plain: Radiocarbon Chronology, Subsistence, and Environment
Author
Dolukhanov, Pavel M.Shukurov, Anvar
Davison, Kate
Sarson, Graeme
Gerasimenko, Natalia P.
Pashkevich, Galina A.
Vybornov, Aleksandr A.
Kovalyukh, Vikolai N.
Skripkin, V. V.
Zaitseva, Ganna I.
Sapelko, Tatiana V.
Issue Date
2009-01-01
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Dolukhanov, P. M., Shukurov, A., Davison, K., Sarson, G., Gerasimenko, N. P., Pashkevich, G. A., ... & Sapelko, T. V. (2009). The spread of the Neolithic in the south East European Plain: Radiocarbon chronology, subsistence, and environment. Radiocarbon, 51(2), 783-793.Journal
RadiocarbonAdditional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
Newly available radiocarbon dates show the early signs of pottery-making in the North Caspian area, the Middle-Lower Volga, and the Lower Don at 8-7 kyr cal BC. Stable settlements, as indicated by "coeval subsamples," are recognized in the Middle-Lower Volga (Yelshanian) at 6.8 kyr cal BC and the Caspian Lowland at about 6 kyr cal BC. The ages of the Strumel-Gostyatin, Surskian, and Bug-Dniesterian sites are in the range of 6.6-4.5 kyr BC, overlapping with early farming entities (Starčevo-Krs-Criş and Linear Pottery), whose influence is perceptible in archaeological materials. Likewise, the 14C-dated pollen data show that the spread of early pottery-making coincided with increased precipitation throughout the forest-steppe area.Type
Articletext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200056095