Archaeology Department, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2019 Jul 17;14(7):e0219094. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219094. eCollection 2019.
This paper investigates how former hunter-gatherers living along the southern North Sea coast in NW Europe adapted to long-term and short-term climatic and environmental changes at the beginning of the Holocene. It is argued that contemporaneous hunter-gatherers repeatedly changed their hunting equipment in response to changing climate and environment, not just for functional reasons but mainly driven by socio-territorial considerations. Based on a Bayesian analysis of 122 critically selected radiocarbon dates a broad chronological correlation is demonstrated between rapid changes in the design and technology of stone projectiles and short but abrupt cooling events, occurring at 10.3, 9.3 and 8.2 ka cal BP. Combined with the rapid sea level rises and increased wildfires these climatic events probably impacted the lifeways of hunter-gatherers in such a way that they increasingly faced resource stress and competition, forcing them to invest in the symbolic defense of their social territories.
本文探讨了生活在欧洲西北部北海沿岸的早期狩猎采集者在全新世早期如何适应长期和短期的气候和环境变化。本文认为,同期的狩猎采集者会根据气候和环境的变化反复改变他们的狩猎工具,这不仅仅是出于功能上的考虑,主要是受到社会地域因素的驱动。通过对 122 个经过严格筛选的放射性碳日期进行贝叶斯分析,本文证明了石器投射物的设计和技术的快速变化与 10.3、9.3 和 8.2 千年前 cal BP 发生的短暂但突然的冷却事件之间存在广泛的时间相关性。这些气候事件与海平面的快速上升和野火的增加相结合,可能以这样一种方式影响了狩猎采集者的生活方式,即他们越来越面临资源压力和竞争,迫使他们投资于对其社会领域的象征性防御。