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    Kovalchuk, O. Gorobets, L. Veiber, A. Lukashov, D. and Yanenko, V. 2018. Animal remains from Neolithic settlements of the Middle Dnieper area (Ukraine). International Journal of Osteoarchaeology,

    Herva, Vesa-Pekka Mökkönen, Teemu and Nordqvist, Kerkko 2017. A northern Neolithic? Clay work, cultivation and cultural transformations in the boreal zone of north-eastern Europe,c.5300-3000 bc. Oxford Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 36, Issue. 1, p. 25.

    Alenius, Teija Mökkönen, Teemu Holmqvist, Elisabeth and Ojala, Antti 2017. Neolithic land use in the northern Boreal zone: high-resolution multiproxy analyses from Lake Huhdasjärvi, south-eastern Finland. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, Vol. 26, Issue. 5, p. 469.

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    Fernández-Domínguez, E. and Reynolds, Luke 2017. Times of Neolithic Transition along the Western Mediterranean. p. 311.

    Matsumoto, Naoko and Sasakura, Mariko 2016. Simulating Prehistoric and Ancient Worlds. p. 311.

    Cheronet, Olivia Finarelli, John A. and Pinhasi, Ron 2016. Morphological change in cranial shape following the transition to agriculture across western Eurasia. Scientific Reports, Vol. 6, Issue. 1,

    Brami, Maxime N. 2015. A graphical simulation of the 2,000-year lag in Neolithic occupation between Central Anatolia and the Aegean basin. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences, Vol. 7, Issue. 3, p. 319.

    Özdoğan, Eylem 2015. Current Research and New Evidence for the Neolithization Process in Western Turkey. European Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 18, Issue. 1, p. 33.

    Gurova, Maria and Bonsall, Clive 2014. ‘Pre-Neolithic’ in Southeast Europe: a Bulgarian perspective. Documenta Praehistorica, Vol. 41, Issue. 0, p. 95.

    Šoberl, Lucija Horvat, Milena Žibrat Gašparič, Andreja Sraka, Marko Evershed, Richard and Budja, Mihael 2014. Neolithic and Eneolithic activities inferred from organic residue analysis of pottery from Mala Triglavca, Moverna vas and Ajdovska jama, Slovenia. Documenta Praehistorica, Vol. 41, Issue. 0, p. 149.

    Budd, Chelsea Lillie, Malcolm Alpaslan-Roodenberg, Songül Karul, Necmi and Pinhasi, Ron 2013. Stable isotope analysis of Neolithic and Chalcolithic populations from Aktopraklık, northern Anatolia. Journal of Archaeological Science, Vol. 40, Issue. 2, p. 860.

    Alenius, Teija Mökkönen, Teemu and Lahelma, Antti 2013. Early Farming in the Northern Boreal Zone: Reassessing the History of Land Use in Southeastern Finland through High-Resolution Pollen Analysis. Geoarchaeology, Vol. 28, Issue. 1, p. 1.

    Jones, Glynis Jones, Huw Charles, Michael P. Jones, Martin K. Colledge, Sue Leigh, Fiona J. Lister, Diane A. Smith, Lydia M.J. Powell, Wayne and Brown, Terrence A. 2012. Phylogeographic analysis of barley DNA as evidence for the spread of Neolithic agriculture through Europe. Journal of Archaeological Science, Vol. 39, Issue. 10, p. 3230.

    Lillie, Malcolm and Budd, Chelsea 2011. Human Bioarchaeology of the Transition to Agriculture. p. 43.

    Sheppard, Peter J. 2011. Lapita Colonization across the Near/Remote Oceania Boundary. Current Anthropology, Vol. 52, Issue. 6, p. 799.

    Lightfoot, E. Boneva, B. Miracle, P.T. Šlaus, M. and O'Connell, T.C. 2011. Exploring the Mesolithic and Neolithic transition in Croatia through isotopic investigations. Antiquity, Vol. 85, Issue. 327, p. 73.

    Schulting, Rick 2011. Human Bioarchaeology of the Transition to Agriculture. p. 15.

    Harrower, Michael McCorriston, Joy and D'Andrea, A. 2010. General/Specific, Local/Global: Comparing the Beginnings of Agriculture in the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia/Eritrea) and Southwest Arabia (Yemen). American Antiquity, Vol. 75, Issue. 3, p. 452.

    O'Gorman, Jodie 2010. Exploring the Longhouse and Community in Tribal Society. American Antiquity, Vol. 75, Issue. 3, p. 571.

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  • Print publication year: 2000
  • Online publication date: December 2009

3 - Transition to agriculture in eastern Europe

Summary

Introduction

A major issue in the debate surrounding the transition to farming in Europe concerns the manner of its spread. To many, the agricultural transition in Europe represents a spread of people, cultigens and domesticates, and of new technology, from the nuclear zone of the Near East to the peripheral zone of Europe, the latter regarded as a passive recipient, rather than an active element in the process of transition. But, despite many years of investigation of the subject – ever since Gordon Childe's first publication of The Dawn of European Civilisation (Childe 1925) – the transition from mainly hunter-gatherer Mesolithic societies to predominantly farming Neolithic ones remains a major unresolved problem in European prehistory, with the reasons for the transition and the manner, the rate, and the mechanism of this transformation all being subjects of debate and controversy (for example, in Britain: Dennell 1983, Ammerman and Cavalli-Sforza 1984, Zvelebil 1986c, Thomas 1988, 1991, Zvelebil and Zvelebil 1988, Ammerman 1989, Zvelebil 1998, etc.; in continental Europe: Lichardus and Lichardus- Itten 1985, Aurenche and Cauvin 1989, Guilaine 1987, Budja 1993, Séfériadès 1993, Zilhão 1993, Cauvin 1994; etc.).

This debate underlines the importance of the issue, which has historical and anthropological, as well as political, implications. Historically, the transition to the Neolithic addresses the origin and constituent elements of the Neolithic and the subsequent cultures in Europe. Anthropologically, it addresses the transformation of material cultures, the processes of diffusion, interaction, and adoption, and their recognition in the archaeological record. Politically, it raises the question of European cultural identity, and of the genetic and linguistic roots of most present-day Europeans (e.g. Renfrew 1987, 1996, Zvelebil and Zvelebil 1988, Sokal et al.

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Europe's First Farmers
  • Online ISBN: 9780511607851
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511607851
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