Department of Archaeology and Conservation, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF10 3EU, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Feb 26;110(9):3298-303. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1211474110. Epub 2013 Feb 11.
Questions about how farming and the Neolithic way of life spread across Europe have been hotly debated topics in archaeology for decades. For a very long time, two models have dominated the discussion: migrations of farming groups from southwestern Asia versus diffusion of domesticates and new ideas through the existing networks of local forager populations. New strontium isotope data from the Danube Gorges in the north-central Balkans, an area characterized by a rich burial record spanning the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, show a significant increase in nonlocal individuals from ∼6200 calibrated B.C., with several waves of migrants into this region. These results are further enhanced by dietary evidence based on carbon and nitrogen isotopes and an increasingly high chronological resolution obtained on a large sample of directly dated individuals. This dataset provides robust evidence for a brief period of coexistence between indigenous groups and early farmers before farming communities absorbed the foragers completely in the first half of the sixth millennium B.C.
几十年来,关于农业和新石器时代生活方式如何在欧洲传播的问题一直是考古学中争论的热点话题。很长一段时间以来,两种模式主导了讨论:来自西南亚的农业群体的迁移,与通过当地觅食者群体的现有网络传播家畜和新思想。来自中北部巴尔干半岛多瑙河峡谷的新锶同位素数据表明,从大约公元前 6200 年开始,该地区的非本地个体数量显著增加,有几波移民进入该地区。这些结果通过基于碳和氮同位素的饮食证据以及在大量直接定年个体上获得的越来越高的时间分辨率得到进一步增强。该数据集为在公元前 6000 年上半年农业社区完全吸收觅食者之前,本土群体和早期农民之间存在短暂共存提供了有力证据。