Nice.
P Prentice Wrote:was there any neolithic settlement? what is settlement? how do you settle?
There were 'neolithic' settlements during the meso/neolithic transition and the continent. There are lone structures and small settlements dated to the 'neolithic' in this country.
There are 'pit sites' that seem to have no buildings, there are pit sites with corresponding houses, there are pit sites that seem to define a rectangular space where a house used to be.
There is the durrington walls settlement.
People have to 'live' somewhere, even if its on a temporary basis.
A while ago few neolithic settlement sites such as Skara Brae and Ehenside tarn were known.
Before Durrington walls, though neolithic villages and towns exist in the middle east and the balkans, the idea of a neolithic village in the UK was preposterous.
I wonder what we will know tommorow?
P Prentice Wrote:was there any neolithic agriculture, what is agriculture?
Yes.
Apparently Biochemists can now chemically test charred grain to test if it has been artificially manured and irrigated. Post-processual-shattering results.:face-stir:
P Prentice Wrote:what was a neolithic territory? what was a neolithic family?
Indeed, deep and problematic. Probably need a time machine to resolve that one unless someone finds a whole preserved landscape under the peat somewhere (see Kilnmatin). Anyone fancy stripping west Ireland or shetland of peat?
However......
Where there are animals utilising resources there is competition. Where there is competition there is conflict. Where there is conflict resolution there are territories.
P Prentice Wrote:what was neolithic trade? axes? religeon? pottery? sheep?
hypothesis makes perfect (p prentice 2014)
More difficult.
Movement of material culture could be through a multitude of vectors not just trade.
How can archaeologists recognise the difference between long-distance trade, down-the-line exchange, political gift exchanges, socially obligated gift exchanges, movement of people (and their stuff)? Or worse still, combinations of the above?
What we understand as 'trade' may not have existed till more recently.
“It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts.”
―
Arthur Conan Doyle,
Sherlock Holmes