It is easy to construct a picture repeated over and over again in
which a well equipped pioneer team sets out in several boats and
moves out into new country. They establish a new community and
prosper. Most important, their population expands sharply as
compared to local hunters.
Soon enough, the local hunters inter marry and importantly, the local
hunters with their farm wives are ideal to lead a new expedition into
new country. Thus a process of natural absorption drives the leading
edge of the natural expansion.
The intermarriage ensures local support and after two centuries, the
populations are fully integrated.
We forget just what a huge leap in technology and lifeway, the
agricultural tool kit was. The gun and the steel plow had the same
effect on the American frontier in that it cleared out the real wilds
and allowed agriculture to fully dominate.
Isotopic data show
farming arrived in Europe with migrants
by Staff Writers
Madison WI (SPX) Feb 14, 2013
Archaeologists have
long wrestled with the question of how farming spread across Europe,
ushering in a host of technologies, including the use of pottery,
that ultimately led to the rise Western civilizations. Two big ideas
have dominated the debate: Did the technology arrive with colonizers
from Asia, notably Anatolia or modern Turkey? Or did the technology,
including newly domesticated plants and animals, simply diffuse
across the European landscape through networks of local foragers?
http://www.seeddaily.com/reports/Isotopic_data_show_farming_arrived_in_Europe_with_migrants_999.html
For decades,
archaeologists have debated how farming spread to Stone Age Europe,
setting the stage for the rise of Western civilization.
Now, new data gleaned
from the teeth of prehistoric farmers and the hunter-gatherers with
whom they briefly overlapped shows that agriculture was introduced to
Central Europe from the Near East by colonizers who brought farming
technology with them.
"One of the big
questions in European archaeology has been whether farming was
brought or borrowed from the Near East," says T. Douglas Price,
a University of Wisconsin-Madison archaeologist who, with Cardiff
University's Dusan Boric, measured strontium isotopes in the teeth of
153 humans from Neolithic burials in an area known as the Danube
Gorges in modern Romania and Serbia.
The report, which
appears this week (Feb. 11, 2013) in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, draws on isotopic signatures of strontium found
in the tooth enamel of people who died nearly 8,000 years ago, about
6,200 B.C. Strontium is a chemical found in rocks everywhere. It
enters the body through diet at or around birth and etches an
indelible signature in teeth that accurately documents the geology of
an individual's birthplace.
"The evidence
from the Danube Gorges shows clearly that new people came in bringing
farming and replaced the earlier Mesolithic hunter-gatherers,"
says Price, a UW-Madison professor of anthropology and an expert on
early agriculture in Europe.
The Danube Gorges
slice through the Carpathian Mountains and in the Stone Age were a
heavily forested setting, rich in fish and game, including huge
sturgeon, catfish, red deer and wild boar. The bends and twists of
the Danube in the Gorges region made it especially important as a
source of fish, and thus potentially a desirable entryway to Europe
for highly mobile and expanding Neolithic communities accompanied by
their domesticates - wheat, barley, flax, goats and cattle.
The new research,
explains Price, speaks to the question of colonization versus
adoption of transformative technologies such as farming. "It is
also useful because it suggests another route across the Black Sea or
up the east coast of Bulgaria to the Danube for farmers moving into
Europe. This contrasts with movement by sea across the Mediterranean
or Aegean, which is the standard picture."
Archaeologists have
long wrestled with the question of how farming spread across Europe,
ushering in a host of technologies, including the use of pottery,
that ultimately led to the rise Western civilizations. Two big ideas
have dominated the debate: Did the technology arrive with colonizers
from Asia, notably Anatolia or modern Turkey? Or did the technology,
including newly domesticated plants and animals, simply diffuse
across the European landscape through networks of local foragers?
There is some evidence
for the importation of early agriculture along the shores of the
Mediterranean and in Central Europe, Price notes, "but elsewhere
in Europe it is not clear whether it was colonists or locals
adopting."
Isotopic studies of
strontium and other chemicals found in the teeth and bones of
Neolithic humans, however, are now helping archaeologists better
track the movement of ancient peoples across the landscape. Strontium
signatures last not just a lifetime, but potentially thousands of
years as tooth enamel, the densest tissue in the body, resists
decomposition and contamination after death. It is now commonly used
by archaeologists to determine if an individual was local or foreign
to the place where their remains were discovered.
An interesting finding
of the study is that 8,000 years ago, when Neolithic farmers were
beginning to migrate into the Danube Gorges and overlap with
Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, more women than men were identified as
foreigners. A possible explanation for the variance, according to the
study, is that women came to these sites from Neolithic farming
communities as part of an ongoing social exchange.
In the Danube Gorges,
the overlap of colonizing early farmers and hunter-gatherers lasted
perhaps a couple of hundred years before the forager societies were
completely absorbed by the beginning of the sixth millennium B.C.
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