Tracing the Materiality of Feathers in Stone Age North-Eastern Europe

Author:

Mannermaa Kristiina1ORCID,Kirkinen Tuija2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cultures, Archaeology, Helsinki and Institute of History and Archaeology, University of Tartu

2. Department of Cultures, Archaeology, University of Helsinki

Abstract

The use of feathers in ritual costumes and everyday clothing is well described in ethnographic sources throughout the world. From the same sources we know that bird wings and feathers were loaded with meaning in traditional societies worldwide. However, direct archaeological evidence of prehistoric use of feathers is still extremely scarce. Hence, feathers belong to the ‘missing majority’: items that are absent from the archaeological record but which we can assume to have been of importance. Here we present microscopic analysis of soil samples from hunter-gatherer burial contexts which reveal the first direct evidence of the use of feathers in the Mesolithic period of north-eastern Europe.

Publisher

Svenska Arkeologiska Samfundet

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

Reference74 articles.

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2. Aguilera, C. 2010. The Transformations of the Quetzal Bird. In: Campana, D., Crabtree, P., deFrance, S.D., Lev-Tov, J. & Choyke, A.M. (eds). Anthropological Approaches to Zooarchaeology. Colonialism, Complexity and Animal Transformations, pp. 237–243. Oxford: Oxbow Books.

3. Albrethsen, S.E. & Brinch Petersen, E. 1976. Excavation of a Mesolithic Cemetery at Vedbæk, Denmark. Acta archaeologica. Vol. 47 pp. 1–28.

4. Back Danielsson, I.-M. 2007. Masking Moments. The Transitions of Bodies and Beings in Late Iron Age Scandinavia. Stockholm: University of Stockholm.

5. Beatty, M.T. & Bonnichsen, R. 1994. Dispersing aggregated Soils and other fine Earth in the Feld for the Recovery of Organic Archeological Materials. Current Research in the Pleistocene. Vol. 11 pp. 73–77.

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