Radiocarbon evidence for the Lateglacial Human Recolonisation of Northern Europe

This paper examines, through the use of Accelerator Mass Spectrometry dating, the database of Lateglacial cultures involved in the recolonisation of northern Europe. The aim is not only to determine the timing of that recolonisation, but also to propose a general model of hunter-gatherer colonisation at a sub-continental scale. The question is addressed of how long the period of abandonment of northern Europe during the Wurm/Weichsel glaciation may have lasted, and when it both started and came to an end. A series of questions is asked concerning the processes and mechanics of recolonisation and the sequences for specific areas are examined. AMS radiocarbon dating shows that a two stage process was involved, which has important implications for our analysis of regional settlement patterns and the changing scale of Lateglacial hunting systems. Recolonisation was a dynamic process, integral to, and internally driven by, the social life of Lateglacial hunters. It may have been constrained by environmental and resource factors, which we have emphasised here, but ultimately it was an historical, social process and should be similarily regarded to that of the farmers. By measuring rates of expansion data are provided for use in other studies of hunter-gatherer colonisation.

[1]  N. Porch,et al.  Cyclical patterns in the pleistocene human occupation of Southwest Tasmania , 1995 .

[2]  W. Warren,et al.  The Quaternary history of Ireland , 1986 .

[3]  B. Grønnow Meiendorf and Stellmoor Revisited : an Analysis of Late Palaeolithic Reindeer Exploitation , 1985 .

[4]  S. Collcutt The Palaeolithic of Britain and its nearest neighbours : recent trends , 1986 .

[5]  J. Clark Radiocarbon Dating and the Spread of Farming Economy , 1965, Antiquity.

[6]  C. Gamble The Social Context for European Palaeolithic Art , 1991, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[7]  C. A. S. Mandryk Hunter-Gatherer Social Costs and the Nonviability of Submarginal Environments , 1993, Journal of Anthropological Research.

[8]  Gerd-Christian Weniger Magdalenian Settlement and Subsistence in South-west Germany , 1987, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[9]  R. Charles Back into the North: the Radiocarbon Evidence for the Human Recolonisation of the North-Western Ardennes after the Last Glacial Maximum , 1996, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[10]  J. G. D. Clark,et al.  Radiocarbon dating and the expansion of farming culture from the Near East over Europe , 1965, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[11]  R. Hedges,et al.  THE OXFORD ACCELERATOR MASS SPECTROMETRY FACILITY: TECHNICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN ROUTINE DATING , 1989 .

[12]  O. Soffer The upper paleolithic of the Central Russian Plain : a study of fluctuational trajectories of culture change , 1987 .

[13]  G. Pope The Late Glacial in North-West Europe: Human Adaptation and Environmental Change at the End of the Pleistocene , 1993, American Antiquity.

[14]  M. Jochim Late Pleistocene Refugia in Europe , 1987 .

[15]  A. Marshack,et al.  MASZYCKA CAVE, A MAGDALENIAN SITE IN SOUTHERN POLAND , 1993 .

[16]  H. Tauber,et al.  New C-14 Datings of Late Palaeolithic Cultures from Northwestern Europe , 1986 .

[17]  O. Soffer The Pleistocene Old World. Regional Perspectives , 1989 .

[18]  O. Soffer,et al.  From Kostenki to Clovis , 1993 .

[19]  Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza,et al.  The Wave of Advance Model for the Spread of Agriculture in Europe , 1979 .

[20]  Robert E. M. Hedges,et al.  Developments in Sample Combustion to Carbon Dioxide, and in the Oxford AMS Carbon Dioxide Ion Source System , 1992 .

[21]  P. Valde-Nowak Studies in Pleistocene settlement in the Polish Carpathians , 1991, Antiquity.

[22]  M. Wolsan,et al.  Upper Palaeolithic boomerang made of a mammoth tusk in south Poland , 1987, Nature.

[23]  C. Ramsey,et al.  RADIOCARBON DATES FROM THE OXFORD AMS SYSTEM: ARCHAEOMETRY DATELIST 21 , 1996 .

[24]  J. Evin,et al.  Human Settlements and the Last Deglaciation in the French Alps , 1994, Radiocarbon.

[25]  L. Johansen,et al.  Tracking Late Glacial reindeer hunters in eastern Denmark , 1996 .

[26]  In Search of the Neanderthals: Solving the Puzzle of Human Origins , 1993 .

[27]  C. Bonsall The Mesolithic in Europe , 1989 .

[28]  Colin Renfrew,et al.  Transformations: Mathematical Approaches to Culture Change. , 1980 .

[29]  J. Kozlowski,et al.  Le Magdalénien à navettes , 1985 .

[30]  B. Fagan The journey from Eden : the peopling of our world , 1990 .

[31]  Curtis N. Runnels,et al.  The earliest farmers in Europe , 1995, Antiquity.

[32]  J. Birdsell ON POPULATION STRUCTURE IN GENERALIZED HUNTING AND COLLECTING POPULATIONS , 1958 .

[33]  J. Campbell The Upper Palaeolithic of Britain: A study of man and nature in the late Ice Age , 1977 .

[34]  O. Soffer The Pleistocene Old World , 1987 .

[35]  J. M. Burdukiewicz The Late Pleistocene Shouldered Point Assemblages in Western Europe , 1986 .

[36]  Paul S. Martin,et al.  Quaternary extinctions : a prehistoric revolution , 1984 .

[37]  N. Conard,et al.  New archaeological and geological research at the palaeolithic locality of Wallertheim in Rheinhessen , 1994 .

[38]  R. Hedges,et al.  The radiocarbon dating of bone , 1989 .

[39]  Robert E. M. Hedges,et al.  A Review of Current Approaches in the Pretreatment of Bone for Radiocarbon Dating by AMS , 1992, Radiocarbon.

[40]  James Steele,et al.  Simulating hunter-gatherer colonization of the Americas , 1996 .

[41]  C. Gamble Timewalkers: The Prehistory of Global Colonization , 1993 .

[42]  J. Holm The earliest settlement of Denmark , 1996 .

[43]  D. Pyle ICE‐CORE ACIDITY PEAKS, RETARDED TREE GROWTH AND PUTATIVE ERUPTIONS , 1989 .

[44]  P. Martin The Discovery of America , 1973, Science.

[45]  J. Rick Dates as Data: An Examination of the Peruvian Preceramic Radiocarbon Record , 1987, American Antiquity.

[46]  J. Gowlett,et al.  RADIOCARBON DATES FROM THE OXFORD AMS SYSTEM: ARCHAEOMETRY DATELIST 3 , 1986 .