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The use of early pottery by hunter-gatherers of the Eastern European forest-steppe

Authors :
Manon Bondetti
Konstantin Andreev
Lara Gonzalez Carretero
Blandine Courel
Aleksandr Vybornov
John Meadows
Rowan McLaughlin
Andrey Skorobogatov
Roman Smol’yaninov
Alexandre Lucquin
Ekaterina Dolbunova
Oliver E. Craig
Aleksey Surkov
Carl Heron
Source :
Quaternary Science Reviews
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Eastern European steppe and forest-steppe is a key region for understanding the emergence of pottery in Europe. The vast region encompasses the basins of two major waterways, the Don and the Volga rivers, and was occupied by hunter-gatherer-fisher communities attracted to highly productive forest/aquatic ecotones. The precise dates for the inception of pottery production in this region and the function of pottery is unknown, but such information is vital for charting the pan-Eurasian dispersal of pottery technology and whether there were common motivations for its adoption. To investigate, we conducted AMS dating, including a re-evaluation of legacy radiocarbon dates together with organic residue analysis and microscopy. The dating programme was able to clarify the sequence and show that hunter-gatherer pottery production was unlikely in this region before the 6th millennium BC. Regarding use, stable isotope and molecular analysis of 160 pottery samples from 35 sites across the region shows that terrestrial animal carcass fats were preferentially processed in pots at Middle Volga sites whereas aquatic resources dominate the residues in pottery from the Middle and Upper Don basin. This is supported by fragments of fish, legumes and grasses in the available charred deposits adhering to the inside of pottery from the Don basin. Since the sites from both river basins had similar environmental settings and were broadly contemporaneous, it is posited that pottery use was under strong cultural control, recognisable as separate sub-regional culinary traditions. The ‘aquatic hypothesis’, previously suggested to explain the emergence of Eurasian pottery, cannot be substantiated in this context.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02773791
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Quaternary Science Reviews
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....99859c3e2142a084048b6d42c61ae22b