Fish Processing in the Iron Gates Region During the Transitional and Early Neolithic Period: An Integrated Approach

Author:

Petrović Anđa1,Lemorini Cristina2,Cesaro Stella Nunziante3,Živaljević Ivana4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Archaeology, University of York , York , United Kingdom

2. Department of Science of Antiquities, Sapienza University of Rome , Rome , Italy

3. Scientific Methodologies Applied to Cultural Heritage (SMATCH) , Rome , Italy

4. BioSense Institute, University of Novi Sad , Novi Sad 21000 , Serbia

Abstract

Abstract It is well known that many Mesolithic and Early Neolithic sites were uncovered during the past century in the Iron Gates region of the North-Central Balkans. The application of diverse analyses on the bioarchaeological remains and artefacts raised many questions, but also offered new ideas about the Mesolithic–Neolithic transitional period in the Middle and Lower course of the Danube. Communities in the Iron Gates consumed fish and exploited the riverbank in prehistory. The stable isotope analyses are implying that these human groups fed on aquatic resources in some periods more than others. Fish remains were also found in settlements, and based on fish-related imagery on sculpted boulders and other artefacts, the bond between the people, river, and the ecosystem was compelling. The idea of this article is to present the possible ways of fish processing at Lepenski Vir using chipped stone tools. Three integrated methodologies, with high levels of interpretation, were applied: use-wear, residue, and archaeozoological analyses. Use-wear and residue analyses were performed on both archaeological and experimental chipped stone tools. The results are considered together with the traces of butchery observed on archaeological samples of fish bones, creating a more coherent picture of the everyday habits of the Iron Gates populations.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Education,Archeology,Conservation

Reference67 articles.

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2. Antonović, D. (2006). Stone tools from Lepenski Vir. Cahiers des Portes de Fer, Monographies 5. Belgrade: Institute of Archaeology.

3. Barrett, J. H. (1995). “Few know an Earl in fishing-clothes”: Fish middens and the economy of the viking age and late norse Earldoms of Orkney and Caithness, Northern Scotland. (Unpublished PhD dissertation). Glasgow: University of Glasgow.

4. Barrett, J. H. (1997). Fish trade in Norse Orkney and Caithness: A zooarchaeological approach. Antiquity, 71, 616–638.

5. Bartosiewicz, L., Boroneanţ, V., Bonsall, C., & Stallibrass, S. (2001). New data on the prehistoric fauna of the Iron Gates: A case study from Schela Cladovei, Romania. In R. Kertész & J. Makkay (Eds.), From the Mesolithic to the Neolithic (Proceedings of the International Archaeological Conference held in the Damjanich Museum of Szolnok, September 22–27, 1996, pp. 15–21). Budapest: Archaeolingua.

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