The chronology of culture: a comparative assessment of European Neolithic dating approaches

Archaeologists have long sought appropriate ways to describe the duration and floruit of archaeological cultures in statistical terms. Thus far, chronological reasoning has been largely reliant on typological sequences. Using summed probability distributions, the authors here compare radiocarbon dates for a series of European Neolithic cultures with their generally accepted ‘standard’ date ranges and with the greater precision afforded by dendrochronology, where that is available. The resulting analysis gives a new and more accurate description of the duration and intensity of European Neolithic cultures.

[1]  M. Besse,et al.  Chronology and Bell Beaker Common Ware , 2009, Radiocarbon.

[2]  Enrico R. Crema,et al.  Isolation-by-distance, homophily, and “core” vs. “package” cultural evolution models in Neolithic Europe , 2015 .

[3]  Johannes Müller Dating the Neolithic: Methodological Premises and Absolute Chronology , 2009, Radiocarbon.

[4]  P. Suter,et al.  Das Neolithikum in der Schweiz , 2012 .

[5]  Christopher Bronk Ramsey,et al.  BAYESIAN ANALYSIS OF RADIOCARBON DATES , 2009 .

[6]  E. Crema Cycles of change in Jomon settlement: a case study from eastern Tokyo Bay , 2013, Antiquity.

[7]  Rob Marchant,et al.  Neolithic agriculture on the European western frontier: the boom and bust of early farming in Ireland , 2014 .

[8]  D. Binder Europe's First Farmers: Mesolithic and Neolithic interaction in southern France and northern Italy: new data and current hypotheses , 2000 .

[9]  Dirk Raetzel-Fabian Absolute Chronology and Cultural Development of the Neolithic Wartberg Culture in Germany , 2002 .

[10]  Tim Kerig,et al.  Regional population collapse followed initial agriculture booms in mid-Holocene Europe , 2013, Nature Communications.

[11]  Martin Furholt Upending a ‘Totality’: Re-evaluating Corded Ware Variability in Late Neolithic Europe , 2014, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[12]  V. Ard Ceramic Traditions and Cultural Identities: West-Central France during the Late Neolithic II Period ( c .3400-2900 cal. BC) : Ceramic Traditions and Cultural Identities , 2013 .

[13]  C. Ramsey,et al.  Development and Application of the Trapezoidal Model for Archaeological Chronologies , 2012, Radiocarbon.

[14]  Stephen Shennan,et al.  Introduction: Archaeological approaches to cultural identity , 2003 .

[15]  L. Thissen,et al.  Depending on 14C Data: Chronological Frameworks in the Neolithic and Chalcolithic of Southeastern Europe , 2009, Radiocarbon.

[16]  C. Renard,et al.  Du Néolithique récent à l’âge du Bronze dans le Centre Nord de la France : les étapes de l’évolution chrono-culturelle , 2009 .

[17]  I. Hodder The spatial organisation of culture , 1978 .

[18]  Aude Coudenneau,et al.  Espaces, techniques et sociétés de la Préhistoire au Moyen-Age : travaux en cours , 2006 .

[19]  A. S. Al-Ruzaiza,et al.  Summarizing a group of 14C dates on the historical time scale: with a worked example from the Late Neolithic of Bavaria , 1991, Antiquity.

[20]  R. Donahue,et al.  Radiocarbon calibration and Late Glacial occupation in northwest Europe , 2000, Antiquity.

[21]  B.L.L. Vanmontfort Bridging the gap. The Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in a frontier zone , 2007 .

[22]  Corrie Bakels Hans Kamermans The End Of Our Fifth Decade. , 2012 .

[23]  Alasdair Whittle,et al.  Histories of the dead: building chronologies for five southern British long barrows , 2007 .

[24]  J. Lüning Erneute Gedanken zur Benennung der neolithischen Perioden. , 1996 .

[25]  I. Hajdas,et al.  New Radiocarbon Dates for the Early Neolithic of the Western Mediterranean , 2008, Radiocarbon.

[26]  B. Ottaway,et al.  DISPERSION DIAGRAMS: A NEW APPROACH TO THE DISPLAY OF CARBON‐14 DATES , 1973 .

[27]  Joseph K. Pickrell,et al.  Ancient DNA Reveals Key Stages in the Formation of Central European Mitochondrial Genetic Diversity , 2013, Science.

[28]  C. Buck,et al.  A Bayesian Approach to the Estimation of Radiocarbon Calibration Curves: The IntCal09 Methodology , 2009, Radiocarbon.

[29]  Niels H. Andersen Gathering Time: Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland , 2014, European Journal of Archaeology.

[30]  P. Pétrequin,et al.  Réinterprétation de la Civilisation Saône-Rhône [ Une approche des tendances culturelles du Néolithique final] , 1987 .

[31]  Lucie Martin,et al.  Agriculture et alimentation végétale en milieu montagnard durant le Néolithique : nouvelles données carpologiques dans les Alpes françaises du Nord , 2010 .

[32]  H. Meller,et al.  The Eulau eulogy: Bioarchaeological interpretation of lethal violence in Corded Ware multiple burials from Saxony-Anhalt, Germany , 2009 .

[33]  E. C. Pielou,et al.  After the Ice Age : the return of life to glaciated North America , 1991 .

[34]  D. Gheorghiu Early Farmers, Late Foragers, and Ceramic Traditions: On the Beginning of Pottery in the Near East and Europe , 2009 .

[35]  S. Shennan,et al.  Archaeological Approaches to Cultural Identity , 1989 .