Quarries and mines in social context

Connecting patterns of change in Neolithic cultural landscapes

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Flint mines and quarries are a widespread phenomenon in the European Neolithic, but are difficult to characterise and to connect to broader sociocultural developments due to challenges of recognition and dating, and to a great diversity of practices across regions and time periods. Neolithic mines and quarries vary greatly in intensity, chronology, and duration of exploitation. Investigations across Europe also reveal varied spatial scales of distribution, production of prestige objects as well as items for everyday use, and widely varying functional and social contexts in which extracted stone is used. The present volume brings together papers that address regional case studies in the context of broader sociocultural landscapes. As such, it explores the variability in mines and quarries in several regions of Neolithic Europe, with a focus on detecting and understanding changes in raw material extraction, related production activities, forms of specialisation or task differentiation, and/or linkages to other locales in technological and social networks. The 14 papers by leading researchers provide a comprehensive overview of the state of knowledge concerning various flint mining and quarrying sites in Central Europe, as well as potential avenues for understanding raw material extraction in relation to other patterns of socio-economic change across national, regional and disciplinary boundaries. The volume originates from a workshop held at Kiel University in 2022 under the auspices of the Collaborative Research Centre (CRC 1266) “Scales of Transformation – Human-Environmental Interaction in Prehistoric and Archaic Societies”.

Lees verder
Specificaties
ISBN/EAN 9789464271683
Auteur Berit Eriksen
Uitgever Sidestone Press
Taal Engels
Uitvoering Paperback / gebrocheerd
Pagina's 420
Lengte
Breedte
Chapter 1. Introduction Berit Valentin Eriksen, Lynn E. Fisher Chapter 2. Of pits and pitfalls. Neolithic flint mining in the province of Limburg (the Netherlands) between ca. 5300 and ca. 2600 BCE Marjorie E. Th. de Grooth Chapter 3. Socio-economic patterns evolution as exemplified by flints procurement: from Early to Middle Neolithic in western Belgium Jean-Philippe Collin, Solène Denis Chapter 4. Specialisation of production, specialisation of space: changes and continuities in the territorial and socio-economic patterns of Bartonian flint production in northern France 5000–3800 BCE Françoise Bostyn Chapter 5. Copper and flint, business cycles and the conditions of knowledge transmission: a demographic explanation Tim Kerig Chapter 6. Beyond mines and quarries – lithic raw material supply and circulation during the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in the Rhineland and Bavaria Silviane Scharl, Birgit Gehlen, Jehanne Affolter, Anna-Leena Fischer, Alexander Kisslinger, Stefan Suhrbier Chapter 7. Exploring lithic production strategies at a Neolithic chert quarry in southwest Germany: intra-quarry variation at Asch-Borgerhau Lynn E. Fisher, Susan K. Harris, Corina Knipper, Rainer Schreg Chapter 8. Neolithic silicite procurement in the Alpine Foreland from the 5th to the 3rd millennium BCE – a case study from the Zurich region Kurt Altorfer, Jehanne Affolter Chapter 9. The mining of Vienna Radiolarite – new perspectives on lithic resource management at the eastern fringe of the Alps Michael Brandl, Oliver Schmitsberger, Martin Penz Chapter 10. Flint supply and access in prehistoric Hungary Katalin T. Biró Chapter 11. Non-siliceous rocks in the context of prehistoric mining in the territory of the Czech Republic Pavel Burgert, Antonín P?ichystal Chapter 12. Mining, use, and distribution of chocolate flint among Neolithic and Bronze Age communities in eastern Central Europe Dagmara H. Werra Chapter 13. Western European Late Neolithic battle axes and their meaning for the reconstruction of enduring socio-spatial patterns Sebastian Schultrich Chapter 14. A diachronic perspective on the mass production of flint tools in early metal using societies. Addressing the evidence of flint mines in Neolithic and Bronze Age Denmark Berit Valentin Eriksen

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