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The Pitted Ware culture on Djursland supra-regional significance and contacts in the Middle Neolithic of southern Scandinavia /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Klassen, Lutz (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Aarhus N : Aarhus University Press, [2020]
Colección:East Jutland Museum publications ; 5.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Colophon
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • The Pitted Ware Phenomenon on Djursland and Maritime Relations across the Kattegat in the Middle Neolithic: An introduction (Lutz Klassen, Rune Iversen &amp
  • Lisbeth Wincentz)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 The Pitted Ware tradition in Denmark: status of research, research questions and hypotheses
  • 3 The Djursland peninsula
  • 4 The CONTACT project
  • 5 References
  • Kainsbakke and Kirial Bro: The two main sites of the Pitted Ware culture on Djursland (Lisbeth Wincentz)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Kainsbakke
  • 2.1 Landscape and topography
  • 2.2 Investigation history and settlement size
  • 2.3 Archaeological investigations
  • 2.4 The finds
  • 2.5 Absolute dating
  • 2.6 Subsistence economy
  • 2.7 Kainsbakke: Concluding remarks
  • 3 Kirial Bro
  • 3.1 Investigation history
  • 3.2 Topography
  • 3.3 Archaeological investigation in 1988
  • 3.4 Finds
  • 3.5 Absolute dating
  • 3.6 Subsistence economy
  • 3.7 Kirial Bro: Concluding remarks
  • 4 References
  • Four minor Pitted Ware culture sites on Djursland: Their individual character and function (Uffe Rasmussen)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Hunting, fishing and flint exploita-tion in Gjerrild Bay
  • Musefælden and Neden Skiden Enge
  • 2.1 The landscape at Gjerrild Bay
  • 2.2 Musefælden
  • 2.3 Neden Skiden Enge A1
  • 2.4 Flint resources in northeastern Djursland
  • 3 Elevated sites with ritual pits
  • Ginnerup and Skærvad
  • 3.1 The landscape of Kolindsund
  • 3.2 Ginnerup
  • 3.3 Skærvad
  • 4 References
  • Pitted Ware culture settlement on Djursland: Overview and interpretation (Uffe Rasmussen, Lisbeth Wincentz, Lutz Klassen &amp
  • Ole B. Poulsen)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Source-critical considerations
  • 3 The two main clusters of PWC sites on Djursland
  • 4 Areas of temporary or seasonal PWC activity
  • 5 PWC inland activity
  • 6 Northwestern Djursland.
  • 7 Pitted Ware culture grave finds?
  • 8 Conclusion
  • 9 References
  • The Pitted Ware culture chronology on Djursland: New evidence from Kainsbakke and other sites (Bente Philippsen, Rune Iversen &amp
  • Lutz Klassen)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 14C-dated sites and their contexts
  • 2.1 Ginnerup
  • 2.2 Kirial Bro
  • 2.3 Kainsbakke
  • 2.4 Ajstrup Krat
  • 2.5 Selbjerg
  • 3 Conclusion
  • 4 References
  • Herder-hunter-fishers and agricultural contacts: Zooarchaeological perspectives on Pitted Ware animal exploitation strategies from Djursland (Cheryl A. Makarewicz &amp
  • Sarah Pleuger)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 1.2 The PWC site of Kainsbakke
  • 2 Zooarchaeological methods
  • 2.1 Survivorship
  • 2.2 Biometrics
  • 2.3 Skeletal element/part representation
  • 2.4 Taphonomy
  • 3 Kainsbakke results
  • 3.1 Taxonomic and skeletal elementbreakdown by pit feature
  • 3.2 Bos spp.
  • 3.3 Sus scrofa
  • 3.4 Ovis aries and Capra hircus
  • 3.5 Cervus elaphus
  • 3.6 Alces alces
  • 3.7 Pinnipeds
  • 3.8 Ursus arctos
  • 3.9 Capreolus capreolus
  • 3.10 Equus ferus
  • 3.11 Other taxa
  • 3.12 Fish
  • 3.13 Invertebrate remains
  • 3.14 Birds
  • 4 Taphonomic analyses of the Kainsbakke faunal assemblage
  • 4.1 Bone marrow extraction and trampling
  • 4.2 Weathering data
  • 4.3 Skeletal element distribution
  • 5 Kirial Bro: Zooarchaeological analyses
  • 6 Ginnerup: Zooarchaeologicalanalyses
  • 7 Conclusions
  • 8 References
  • Appendices
  • Appendix A
  • Appendix B
  • Appendix C
  • Appendix D
  • Appendix E
  • Exploitation of marine fish byPitted Ware groups at Kainsbakkeand Kirial Bro (Sarah Pleuger &amp
  • Cheryl A. Makarewicz)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Marine environments in the Kattegat
  • 3 Methods: Material recovery and faunal analysis
  • 4 Results
  • 5 Distribution of skeletal elements
  • 6 Carbon and nitrogen isotopeanalyses of the fish remains from Kainsbakke.
  • 6.1 Carbon isotopes in marine environments
  • 6.2 Nitrogen isotopes in marine environments
  • 6.3 Methods
  • 6.4 Stable isotope analysis: Results
  • 7 Discussion
  • 7.1 Seasonality of fishing activities at Kainsbakke and Kirial Bro
  • 7.2 Fishing activities at Kainsbakke and Kirial Bro
  • location and technology
  • 7.3 The significance of fishing for the subsistence of PWC people on Djursland
  • 8 References
  • Agriculture during the Pitted Wareculture in the Kattegat region? (Marianne H. Andreasen)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Previous evidence of PWC agriculture
  • 2.1 Indirect evidence
  • 2.2 Direct evidence
  • 3 Carbonised cereal grains from PWC contexts
  • 3.1 Western Sweden
  • 3.2 Kainsbakke (DJM 1900)
  • 3.3 Kirial Bro (DJM 1930)
  • 4 Discussion
  • 5 Conclusion
  • 6 References
  • Provenancing Neolithic pottery: An investigation of the elemental composition of Pitted Ware and Funnel Beaker pottery from Djursland and adjacent regions (Malou Blank, Torbjörn Brorsson &amp
  • Imelda Bakunic Fridén)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Pottery and sites
  • 3 Pottery analysis and statistics
  • 4 Results and discussion: The elemental composition of pottery from Djursland and adjacent regions
  • 4.1 The elemental composition of TRB andPWC pottery
  • 4.2 Inter-regional variations in the elemental composition of Neolithic pottery
  • 4.3 Elemental composition of pottery compared between sites
  • 4.4 Techniques, recipes and materials employed in pottery production in eastern Jutland
  • 5 Conclusions
  • 6 References
  • Appendix
  • Strontium and lead isotope studies of faunal and human remains from Kainsbakke and Kirial Bro (Lutz Klassen, T. Douglas Price, Karl-Göran Sjögren, Lisbeth Wincentz &amp
  • Bente Philippsen)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Sr isotope provenancing
  • 2.1 Principles of Sr isotope analysis
  • 2.2 Sr isotope baselines
  • 3 Bears, Eurasian elk/elks and a human.
  • 3.1 The human from Kainsbakke
  • 3.2 Eurasian elks from Kainsbakke
  • 3.3 Brown bears from Kainsbakke
  • 4 The origin of non-local animals
  • 4.1 Brown bear and Eurasian elk
  • 4.2 Red deer and cattle
  • 5 Pb (lead) isotope analysis
  • 6 Summary and conclusion
  • 7 References
  • Genetic sex and haplogroup identification of the Pitted Ware culture human upper jaw from Kainsbakke, Denmark (Morten E. Allentoft)
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 DNA extraction, librarypreparation and sequencing
  • 3 Bioinformatics
  • 4 Molecular authenticity
  • 5 Mitochondrial haplogroup and sex determination
  • 6 Conclusion
  • 7 References
  • The Pitted Ware culture on Djursland inthe Neolithic world (Lutz Klassen, Rune Iversen, Niels Nørkjær Johannsen, Uffe Rasmussen &amp
  • Ole B. Poulsen)
  • 1 The identity of the Pitted Ware culture on Djursland
  • 1.1 Material culture
  • 1.2 Economy
  • 1.3 Settlement and land-use
  • 1.4 Ritual activities and graves
  • 1.5 Genetic information
  • 1.6 Appearances and reality: The nature of the PWC group on Djursland
  • 2 Why Kainsbakke? The site and its surroundings in the late Early and early Middle Neolithic
  • 2.1 The landscape setting of the Kainsbakke site
  • 2.2 A TRB ritual superstructure
  • 2.3 A TRB depositional landscape
  • 2.4 Parallels to the ritual structures and sites around Kainsbakke
  • 2.5 The flint resources of northeastern Djursland and their importance for the Kainsbakke site
  • 3 Kainsbakke and the Pitted Ware culture on Djursland in a wider geographical context
  • 3.1 The emergence of the Pitted Ware culture on Djursland
  • 3.2 The major deposition in pit A47 and the end of the Pitted Ware culture on Djursland
  • 4 References.