TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring Hypotheses on Early Holocene Caspian Seafaring Through Personal Ornaments
T2 - A Study of Changing Styles and Symbols in Western Central Asia
AU - Rigaud, Solange
AU - Queffelec, Alain
AU - Le Bourdonnec, François Xavier
AU - Alisher Kyzy, Saltanat
AU - Ambrose, Stanley H.
AU - Ledevin, Ronan
AU - Kurbanov, Redzhep
AU - Buzhilova, Alexandra
AU - Berezina, Natalia
AU - Ziganshin, Rustam H.
AU - Shnaider, Svetlana
N1 - Funding information: This work was supported by the French National Research Agency under the IDEX Bordeaux NETAWA Emergence project No ANR-10-IDEX-03-02 “Out of the Core: Exploring social NETworks at the dawn of Agriculture in Western Asia 10,000 years ago,” the French-Russian CNRS International Laboratory “Multidisciplinary Research on Prehistoric Art in Eurasia – ARTEMIR” and the Grand Programme de Recherche “Human Past” of the University of Bordeaux; the analysis of Okladnikov’s archive materials was support by RSF #19-78-10053 “The emergence of food-producing economies in the high mountains of interior Central Asia” (Saltanat Alisher kyzy, Svetlana Shnaider); analysis of the anthropological collection and sex determination were supported by project # AAAA-A19-119013090163-20 (Natalia Berezina).
PY - 2023/1/1
Y1 - 2023/1/1
N2 - This article studies the discoid Didacna sp. shell beads discovered at Kaylu, a Middle Holocene burial site located in Southern Turkmenistan. Microscopic, morphometric, spectrometric, and SEM analyses were carried out on the material to identify how the beads were manufactured and used. New radiocarbon dating and bioanthropological data to age and sex the two skeletons discovered in the burials are provided. A regional synthesis shows that personal ornaments from the Caspian region were diversified through time and that a stylistic shift between the last foragers and the first farmers occurred. We also observed strong correspondences between the personal ornaments documented in the northern, eastern, and western Caspian Sea during the Neolithic, with no evidence of similar symbolic production in Northern Iran. We propose that a northern route may have allowed the diffusion of common ornamental traditions in the Caspian region to the exclusion of the southern Caspian. Alternatively, discontinuities in material culture diffusion in coastal areas could be evidence of maritime voyaging. Seafaring may have granted the fast and spatially erratic diffusion of specific bead types, people, information, knowledge, and symbols from both sides of the Caspian Sea, by long maritime voyages or by leapfrog diffusion during the Neolithic.
AB - This article studies the discoid Didacna sp. shell beads discovered at Kaylu, a Middle Holocene burial site located in Southern Turkmenistan. Microscopic, morphometric, spectrometric, and SEM analyses were carried out on the material to identify how the beads were manufactured and used. New radiocarbon dating and bioanthropological data to age and sex the two skeletons discovered in the burials are provided. A regional synthesis shows that personal ornaments from the Caspian region were diversified through time and that a stylistic shift between the last foragers and the first farmers occurred. We also observed strong correspondences between the personal ornaments documented in the northern, eastern, and western Caspian Sea during the Neolithic, with no evidence of similar symbolic production in Northern Iran. We propose that a northern route may have allowed the diffusion of common ornamental traditions in the Caspian region to the exclusion of the southern Caspian. Alternatively, discontinuities in material culture diffusion in coastal areas could be evidence of maritime voyaging. Seafaring may have granted the fast and spatially erratic diffusion of specific bead types, people, information, knowledge, and symbols from both sides of the Caspian Sea, by long maritime voyages or by leapfrog diffusion during the Neolithic.
KW - Caspian Mesolithic
KW - Neolithic
KW - Raman spectroscopy
KW - SEM
KW - bead
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U2 - 10.1515/opar-2022-0289
DO - 10.1515/opar-2022-0289
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85159282953
SN - 2300-6560
VL - 9
JO - Open Archaeology
JF - Open Archaeology
IS - 1
M1 - 20220289
ER -