Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Shipbuilding and related industries often represented the highest technology of their time, and archaeologists have played a leading role in the process of understanding its nature and complexities. The literature on ancient shipbuilding is skewed, however, toward ships associated with cultural elites or with powerful historical associations, such as battles or other documented events and famous personalities. In the case of early ships, there is also a preoccupation with the earliest example of a particular shipbuilding tradition or, for that matter, of shipbuilding itself.
The recent history of archaeology offers on-land guidance here. Archaeological fieldwork in the late 1940s and 1950s, initiated by archaeologist Robert Braidwood, led to discoveries and claims for the earliest domestication in the Iraqi highlands, particularly at the ancient village site of Jarmo (Braidwood and Howe, 1960). Further research in this region by Kathleen Kenyon, James Mellaart, Frank Hole, and Kent Flannery, however, led to the recognition that early domestication was not a unique event but a process that was under way around 12,000 to 10,000 years ago at more than 20 sites from Turkey to Iran and extending southward to Jordan and southern Israel. Subsequent archaeological research expanded the number of locations and sought to identify and evaluate different cultural and ecological factors that drove this process. Archaeologists now assume that the origin of agriculture and settled communities in the Middle East was a multifaceted process that took place over a wide but ecologically definable region and over a period of hundreds or even thousands of years – it was not a single event at a particular spot or attributable to a single cause.
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