Early farming in Dalmatia : : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe / / Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].

The origins and spread of farming are vital subjects of research, notably because agriculture makes possible our modern world. The Early Farming in Dalmatia Project is investigating the expansion of farming from its centre of origin in western Asia through the Mediterranean into southern Europe. Thi...

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Place / Publishing House:Oxford : : Archaeopress Publishing Limited,, [2019]
©2019
Year of Publication:2019
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (119 pages) :; illustrations (some color), 1 map
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spelling Moore, A. M. T. (Andrew Michael Tangye), author.
Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe / Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].
1st ed.
Oxford : Archaeopress Publishing Limited, [2019]
©2019
1 online resource (119 pages) : illustrations (some color), 1 map
text rdacontent
computer rdamedia
online resource rdacarrier
The origins and spread of farming are vital subjects of research, notably because agriculture makes possible our modern world. The Early Farming in Dalmatia Project is investigating the expansion of farming from its centre of origin in western Asia through the Mediterranean into southern Europe. This multidisciplinary ecological project combines comprehensive recovery of archaeological materials through excavation with landscape studies. It addresses several key questions, including when and how farming reached Dalmatia, what was the nature of this new economy, and what was its impact on the local environment. Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik have demonstrated that their inhabitants were full-time farmers. The two sites were among the largest known Neolithic villages in the eastern Adriatic. A comprehensive program of AMS dating indicates that together they were occupied from c. 8,000 to 6,800 cal BP. Our research has begun to illuminate the details of their farming system, as well as the changes that took place in their way of life through the Neolithic. Their economy was derived from western Asia and it is likely that their ancestors came from there also. It was these people who brought agriculture and village life to the Adriatic and to the rest of the central and western Mediterranean. Once in place, this farming economy persisted in much the same form from the Neolithic down to the present.
Description based on print version record.
Includes bibliographical references.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents Page -- List of Figures and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Background to the research -- Inception of the project -- Selection of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Figure 1. Location map of Pokrovnik and Danilo, and other key sites mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. Aerial view of the Danilo Valley looking west. The site of Danilo Bitinj is in the middle distance -- the Adriatic Sea is visible on the horizon (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 3. Aerial view of the site of Danilo Bitinj, looking southeast (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 4. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the northeast. The Pećina spring is in the grove of hackberry trees to the left of center. -- History of research at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik 2003-2006 -- Danilo 2003-2005 -- Methods of excavation -- The excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005 -- Pokrovik 2004-2006 -- The excavation -- Figure 5. The site of Danilo from the northeast. The Dabar stream runs along the far side of the site beside the valley road. -- Figure 6. Plan of the site of Danilo showing the locations of the trenches we excavated. The locations of the trenches dug by Korošec (1953, 1955) and Menđušić (1992) are also indicated. -- Figure 7. Danilo, Trench A. General view of the Neolithic deposits looking southwest. Scale 2 m. -- Figure 8. Danilo, Trench A. Burial of a young child (Level 48, object number DA05 A895) beside a hearth, upper left, looking northwest. Scale 10 cm. -- Figure 9. Danilo, Trench B. The gully. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 10. Danilo, Trench C. Pits and postholes dug into the clay subsoil. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 11. Danilo, Trench E. The outline of a rectangular, single-roomed house. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 12. Danilo, Trench E. Stake impressions in the subsoil. Scale 1 m.
Figure 13. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the Gradina hill looking northwest. The Čikola Gorge is visible in the middle distance. -- Figure 14. Location of the four trenches we excavated in a single field that transected the site. -- Figure 15. Plan of the site of Pokrovnik showing the locations of the trenches we excavated and also those excavated by Brusić in 1979. -- Figure 16. Pokrovnik, Trench D. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels from the north. Scale 1m. -- Figure 17. Pokrovnik, Trench A. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels and a pit dug from the overlying Danilo phase, looking north. Scales 1m. -- Figure 19. Pokrovnik, Trench D. A seated baked clay female figurine from the Impressed Ware levels. (Level 22, object number PK06 D380 -- Scale 5 cm.) -- Chronology of Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Figure 20. Impressed Ware/Impresso pottery from Pokrovnik, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Figure 21. Danilo pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Pottery and the Early Farming in Dalmatia Project -- Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Decoration -- Typology -- Ceramic Technology at Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Pokrovnik, Trench D -- Evidence from the pottery for dairying at Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj -- Conclusions -- Table 2. Danilo Trench E pottery fragments. -- Table 3. Decorations recorded among fragments at Danilo, Trench E. -- Table 4. Lips, rims, handles and bases on fragments from Danilo Trench E. -- Table 5. Manufacturing and paste characteristics at Danilo, Trench E (n=49 -- except where noted). -- Table 7. Decorative techniques in Pokrovnik, Trench D, lower levels. -- The chipped stone, stone tools and other artifacts -- Chipped stone -- Stone tools -- Bone tools.
Table 8. The plant species with numbers of specimens recorded by Brusić in his excavations at Pokrovnik. -- The plant remains from Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Earlier archaeobotanical studies at the two sites -- Current archaeobotanical studies -- The samples -- Representation of crops and wild plants -- Cereals -- Pulses and oil plants -- Wild plant foods -- Discussion -- Other wild taxa -- Table 9. Volumes of soil processed by flotation at Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 10. Number of identified plant items recovered from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 11. Average number of identified taxa per phase. -- Table 12. Taxa identified in samples from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Animal husbandry and environment -- Bone preservation and recovery -- Table 13. Preservation conditions at the two sites. -- The faunal remains -- Table 14. Percentages of species based upon counts of identified bones. -- Table 15. Proportions of domestic species by mandible count*. -- Table 16. Ratio of identified caprine mandibles to identified limb bones at various sites. -- The mammalian species found at Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Domestic Species -- Pig, Sus scrofa. -- Sheep, Ovis musimon, and Goat, Capra aegagrus -- Cattle, Bos taurus -- The wild species -- Red deer, Cervus elaphus -- Roe deer, Capreolus capreolus -- The hare, Lepus capensis -- Table 17. Ages of cattle from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 18. Measurements of hare bones (mm) -- The fauna of Pokrovnik and Danilo: environmental and economic considerations -- Marine shells -- Materials, methods and results -- Discussion -- Conclusions -- Table 19. Bivalve shells by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 20. Finds of bivalve shell fragments by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006.
Table 21. Bivalve shells and shell fragments found by taxa collected in excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 22. Bivalve taxa collected in research at Danilo in 1953, 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Geomorphology and soils in the vicinity of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Paleoclimatic and physiographic setting -- Site pedology and geomorphology -- Contemporary vegetation around Danilo and Pokrovnik -- The agricultural survey -- Commentary on results achieved thus far and their significance -- References.
Excavations (Archaeology) Croatia Dalmatia.
Dalmatia (Croatia) Antiquities.
1-78969-158-3
language English
format eBook
author Moore, A. M. T.
spellingShingle Moore, A. M. T.
Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe /
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents Page -- List of Figures and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Background to the research -- Inception of the project -- Selection of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Figure 1. Location map of Pokrovnik and Danilo, and other key sites mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. Aerial view of the Danilo Valley looking west. The site of Danilo Bitinj is in the middle distance -- the Adriatic Sea is visible on the horizon (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 3. Aerial view of the site of Danilo Bitinj, looking southeast (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 4. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the northeast. The Pećina spring is in the grove of hackberry trees to the left of center. -- History of research at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik 2003-2006 -- Danilo 2003-2005 -- Methods of excavation -- The excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005 -- Pokrovik 2004-2006 -- The excavation -- Figure 5. The site of Danilo from the northeast. The Dabar stream runs along the far side of the site beside the valley road. -- Figure 6. Plan of the site of Danilo showing the locations of the trenches we excavated. The locations of the trenches dug by Korošec (1953, 1955) and Menđušić (1992) are also indicated. -- Figure 7. Danilo, Trench A. General view of the Neolithic deposits looking southwest. Scale 2 m. -- Figure 8. Danilo, Trench A. Burial of a young child (Level 48, object number DA05 A895) beside a hearth, upper left, looking northwest. Scale 10 cm. -- Figure 9. Danilo, Trench B. The gully. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 10. Danilo, Trench C. Pits and postholes dug into the clay subsoil. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 11. Danilo, Trench E. The outline of a rectangular, single-roomed house. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 12. Danilo, Trench E. Stake impressions in the subsoil. Scale 1 m.
Figure 13. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the Gradina hill looking northwest. The Čikola Gorge is visible in the middle distance. -- Figure 14. Location of the four trenches we excavated in a single field that transected the site. -- Figure 15. Plan of the site of Pokrovnik showing the locations of the trenches we excavated and also those excavated by Brusić in 1979. -- Figure 16. Pokrovnik, Trench D. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels from the north. Scale 1m. -- Figure 17. Pokrovnik, Trench A. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels and a pit dug from the overlying Danilo phase, looking north. Scales 1m. -- Figure 19. Pokrovnik, Trench D. A seated baked clay female figurine from the Impressed Ware levels. (Level 22, object number PK06 D380 -- Scale 5 cm.) -- Chronology of Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Figure 20. Impressed Ware/Impresso pottery from Pokrovnik, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Figure 21. Danilo pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Pottery and the Early Farming in Dalmatia Project -- Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Decoration -- Typology -- Ceramic Technology at Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Pokrovnik, Trench D -- Evidence from the pottery for dairying at Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj -- Conclusions -- Table 2. Danilo Trench E pottery fragments. -- Table 3. Decorations recorded among fragments at Danilo, Trench E. -- Table 4. Lips, rims, handles and bases on fragments from Danilo Trench E. -- Table 5. Manufacturing and paste characteristics at Danilo, Trench E (n=49 -- except where noted). -- Table 7. Decorative techniques in Pokrovnik, Trench D, lower levels. -- The chipped stone, stone tools and other artifacts -- Chipped stone -- Stone tools -- Bone tools.
Table 8. The plant species with numbers of specimens recorded by Brusić in his excavations at Pokrovnik. -- The plant remains from Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Earlier archaeobotanical studies at the two sites -- Current archaeobotanical studies -- The samples -- Representation of crops and wild plants -- Cereals -- Pulses and oil plants -- Wild plant foods -- Discussion -- Other wild taxa -- Table 9. Volumes of soil processed by flotation at Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 10. Number of identified plant items recovered from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 11. Average number of identified taxa per phase. -- Table 12. Taxa identified in samples from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Animal husbandry and environment -- Bone preservation and recovery -- Table 13. Preservation conditions at the two sites. -- The faunal remains -- Table 14. Percentages of species based upon counts of identified bones. -- Table 15. Proportions of domestic species by mandible count*. -- Table 16. Ratio of identified caprine mandibles to identified limb bones at various sites. -- The mammalian species found at Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Domestic Species -- Pig, Sus scrofa. -- Sheep, Ovis musimon, and Goat, Capra aegagrus -- Cattle, Bos taurus -- The wild species -- Red deer, Cervus elaphus -- Roe deer, Capreolus capreolus -- The hare, Lepus capensis -- Table 17. Ages of cattle from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 18. Measurements of hare bones (mm) -- The fauna of Pokrovnik and Danilo: environmental and economic considerations -- Marine shells -- Materials, methods and results -- Discussion -- Conclusions -- Table 19. Bivalve shells by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 20. Finds of bivalve shell fragments by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006.
Table 21. Bivalve shells and shell fragments found by taxa collected in excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 22. Bivalve taxa collected in research at Danilo in 1953, 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Geomorphology and soils in the vicinity of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Paleoclimatic and physiographic setting -- Site pedology and geomorphology -- Contemporary vegetation around Danilo and Pokrovnik -- The agricultural survey -- Commentary on results achieved thus far and their significance -- References.
author_facet Moore, A. M. T.
author_variant a m t m amt amtm
author_fuller (Andrew Michael Tangye),
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Moore, A. M. T.
title Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe /
title_sub Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe /
title_full Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe / Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].
title_fullStr Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe / Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].
title_full_unstemmed Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe / Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].
title_auth Early farming in Dalmatia : Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe /
title_new Early farming in Dalmatia :
title_sort early farming in dalmatia : pokrovnik and danilo bitinj : two neolithic villages in southeast europe /
publisher Archaeopress Publishing Limited,
publishDate 2019
physical 1 online resource (119 pages) : illustrations (some color), 1 map
edition 1st ed.
contents Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents Page -- List of Figures and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Background to the research -- Inception of the project -- Selection of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Figure 1. Location map of Pokrovnik and Danilo, and other key sites mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. Aerial view of the Danilo Valley looking west. The site of Danilo Bitinj is in the middle distance -- the Adriatic Sea is visible on the horizon (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 3. Aerial view of the site of Danilo Bitinj, looking southeast (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 4. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the northeast. The Pećina spring is in the grove of hackberry trees to the left of center. -- History of research at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik 2003-2006 -- Danilo 2003-2005 -- Methods of excavation -- The excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005 -- Pokrovik 2004-2006 -- The excavation -- Figure 5. The site of Danilo from the northeast. The Dabar stream runs along the far side of the site beside the valley road. -- Figure 6. Plan of the site of Danilo showing the locations of the trenches we excavated. The locations of the trenches dug by Korošec (1953, 1955) and Menđušić (1992) are also indicated. -- Figure 7. Danilo, Trench A. General view of the Neolithic deposits looking southwest. Scale 2 m. -- Figure 8. Danilo, Trench A. Burial of a young child (Level 48, object number DA05 A895) beside a hearth, upper left, looking northwest. Scale 10 cm. -- Figure 9. Danilo, Trench B. The gully. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 10. Danilo, Trench C. Pits and postholes dug into the clay subsoil. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 11. Danilo, Trench E. The outline of a rectangular, single-roomed house. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 12. Danilo, Trench E. Stake impressions in the subsoil. Scale 1 m.
Figure 13. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the Gradina hill looking northwest. The Čikola Gorge is visible in the middle distance. -- Figure 14. Location of the four trenches we excavated in a single field that transected the site. -- Figure 15. Plan of the site of Pokrovnik showing the locations of the trenches we excavated and also those excavated by Brusić in 1979. -- Figure 16. Pokrovnik, Trench D. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels from the north. Scale 1m. -- Figure 17. Pokrovnik, Trench A. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels and a pit dug from the overlying Danilo phase, looking north. Scales 1m. -- Figure 19. Pokrovnik, Trench D. A seated baked clay female figurine from the Impressed Ware levels. (Level 22, object number PK06 D380 -- Scale 5 cm.) -- Chronology of Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Figure 20. Impressed Ware/Impresso pottery from Pokrovnik, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Figure 21. Danilo pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Pottery and the Early Farming in Dalmatia Project -- Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Decoration -- Typology -- Ceramic Technology at Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Pokrovnik, Trench D -- Evidence from the pottery for dairying at Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj -- Conclusions -- Table 2. Danilo Trench E pottery fragments. -- Table 3. Decorations recorded among fragments at Danilo, Trench E. -- Table 4. Lips, rims, handles and bases on fragments from Danilo Trench E. -- Table 5. Manufacturing and paste characteristics at Danilo, Trench E (n=49 -- except where noted). -- Table 7. Decorative techniques in Pokrovnik, Trench D, lower levels. -- The chipped stone, stone tools and other artifacts -- Chipped stone -- Stone tools -- Bone tools.
Table 8. The plant species with numbers of specimens recorded by Brusić in his excavations at Pokrovnik. -- The plant remains from Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Earlier archaeobotanical studies at the two sites -- Current archaeobotanical studies -- The samples -- Representation of crops and wild plants -- Cereals -- Pulses and oil plants -- Wild plant foods -- Discussion -- Other wild taxa -- Table 9. Volumes of soil processed by flotation at Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 10. Number of identified plant items recovered from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 11. Average number of identified taxa per phase. -- Table 12. Taxa identified in samples from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Animal husbandry and environment -- Bone preservation and recovery -- Table 13. Preservation conditions at the two sites. -- The faunal remains -- Table 14. Percentages of species based upon counts of identified bones. -- Table 15. Proportions of domestic species by mandible count*. -- Table 16. Ratio of identified caprine mandibles to identified limb bones at various sites. -- The mammalian species found at Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Domestic Species -- Pig, Sus scrofa. -- Sheep, Ovis musimon, and Goat, Capra aegagrus -- Cattle, Bos taurus -- The wild species -- Red deer, Cervus elaphus -- Roe deer, Capreolus capreolus -- The hare, Lepus capensis -- Table 17. Ages of cattle from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 18. Measurements of hare bones (mm) -- The fauna of Pokrovnik and Danilo: environmental and economic considerations -- Marine shells -- Materials, methods and results -- Discussion -- Conclusions -- Table 19. Bivalve shells by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 20. Finds of bivalve shell fragments by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006.
Table 21. Bivalve shells and shell fragments found by taxa collected in excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 22. Bivalve taxa collected in research at Danilo in 1953, 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Geomorphology and soils in the vicinity of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Paleoclimatic and physiographic setting -- Site pedology and geomorphology -- Contemporary vegetation around Danilo and Pokrovnik -- The agricultural survey -- Commentary on results achieved thus far and their significance -- References.
isbn 1-78969-159-1
1-78969-158-3
callnumber-first D - World History
callnumber-subject DR - Balkan Peninsula
callnumber-label DR1623
callnumber-sort DR 41623 M66 42019
geographic Dalmatia (Croatia) Antiquities.
geographic_facet Croatia
Dalmatia.
Dalmatia (Croatia)
illustrated Illustrated
dewey-hundreds 900 - History & geography
dewey-tens 910 - Geography & travel
dewey-ones 914 - Geography of & travel in Europe
dewey-full 914.972
dewey-sort 3914.972
dewey-raw 914.972
dewey-search 914.972
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M. T.</subfield><subfield code="q">(Andrew Michael Tangye),</subfield><subfield code="e">author.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Early farming in Dalmatia :</subfield><subfield code="b">Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj : two Neolithic villages in Southeast Europe /</subfield><subfield code="c">Andrew Moore [and fourteen others].</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="250" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1st ed.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Oxford :</subfield><subfield code="b">Archaeopress Publishing Limited,</subfield><subfield code="c">[2019]</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©2019</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (119 pages) :</subfield><subfield code="b">illustrations (some color), 1 map</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The origins and spread of farming are vital subjects of research, notably because agriculture makes possible our modern world. The Early Farming in Dalmatia Project is investigating the expansion of farming from its centre of origin in western Asia through the Mediterranean into southern Europe. This multidisciplinary ecological project combines comprehensive recovery of archaeological materials through excavation with landscape studies. It addresses several key questions, including when and how farming reached Dalmatia, what was the nature of this new economy, and what was its impact on the local environment. Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik have demonstrated that their inhabitants were full-time farmers. The two sites were among the largest known Neolithic villages in the eastern Adriatic. A comprehensive program of AMS dating indicates that together they were occupied from c. 8,000 to 6,800 cal BP. Our research has begun to illuminate the details of their farming system, as well as the changes that took place in their way of life through the Neolithic. Their economy was derived from western Asia and it is likely that their ancestors came from there also. It was these people who brought agriculture and village life to the Adriatic and to the rest of the central and western Mediterranean. Once in place, this farming economy persisted in much the same form from the Neolithic down to the present.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on print version record.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents Page -- List of Figures and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Background to the research -- Inception of the project -- Selection of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Figure 1. Location map of Pokrovnik and Danilo, and other key sites mentioned in the text. -- Figure 2. Aerial view of the Danilo Valley looking west. The site of Danilo Bitinj is in the middle distance -- the Adriatic Sea is visible on the horizon (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 3. Aerial view of the site of Danilo Bitinj, looking southeast (photo Šibenik Museum). -- Figure 4. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the northeast. The Pećina spring is in the grove of hackberry trees to the left of center. -- History of research at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Excavations at Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik 2003-2006 -- Danilo 2003-2005 -- Methods of excavation -- The excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005 -- Pokrovik 2004-2006 -- The excavation -- Figure 5. The site of Danilo from the northeast. The Dabar stream runs along the far side of the site beside the valley road. -- Figure 6. Plan of the site of Danilo showing the locations of the trenches we excavated. The locations of the trenches dug by Korošec (1953, 1955) and Menđušić (1992) are also indicated. -- Figure 7. Danilo, Trench A. General view of the Neolithic deposits looking southwest. Scale 2 m. -- Figure 8. Danilo, Trench A. Burial of a young child (Level 48, object number DA05 A895) beside a hearth, upper left, looking northwest. Scale 10 cm. -- Figure 9. Danilo, Trench B. The gully. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 10. Danilo, Trench C. Pits and postholes dug into the clay subsoil. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 11. Danilo, Trench E. The outline of a rectangular, single-roomed house. Scale 1 m. -- Figure 12. Danilo, Trench E. Stake impressions in the subsoil. Scale 1 m.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Figure 13. View of the site of Pokrovnik from the Gradina hill looking northwest. The Čikola Gorge is visible in the middle distance. -- Figure 14. Location of the four trenches we excavated in a single field that transected the site. -- Figure 15. Plan of the site of Pokrovnik showing the locations of the trenches we excavated and also those excavated by Brusić in 1979. -- Figure 16. Pokrovnik, Trench D. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels from the north. Scale 1m. -- Figure 17. Pokrovnik, Trench A. View of a massive wall in the Impressed Ware levels and a pit dug from the overlying Danilo phase, looking north. Scales 1m. -- Figure 19. Pokrovnik, Trench D. A seated baked clay female figurine from the Impressed Ware levels. (Level 22, object number PK06 D380 -- Scale 5 cm.) -- Chronology of Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Figure 20. Impressed Ware/Impresso pottery from Pokrovnik, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Figure 21. Danilo pottery from Pokrovnik and Danilo, illustrating characteristic shapes and decoration. -- Pottery and the Early Farming in Dalmatia Project -- Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Decoration -- Typology -- Ceramic Technology at Danilo Bitinj, Trench E -- Pokrovnik, Trench D -- Evidence from the pottery for dairying at Pokrovnik and Danilo Bitinj -- Conclusions -- Table 2. Danilo Trench E pottery fragments. -- Table 3. Decorations recorded among fragments at Danilo, Trench E. -- Table 4. Lips, rims, handles and bases on fragments from Danilo Trench E. -- Table 5. Manufacturing and paste characteristics at Danilo, Trench E (n=49 -- except where noted). -- Table 7. Decorative techniques in Pokrovnik, Trench D, lower levels. -- The chipped stone, stone tools and other artifacts -- Chipped stone -- Stone tools -- Bone tools.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Table 8. The plant species with numbers of specimens recorded by Brusić in his excavations at Pokrovnik. -- The plant remains from Danilo Bitinj and Pokrovnik -- Earlier archaeobotanical studies at the two sites -- Current archaeobotanical studies -- The samples -- Representation of crops and wild plants -- Cereals -- Pulses and oil plants -- Wild plant foods -- Discussion -- Other wild taxa -- Table 9. Volumes of soil processed by flotation at Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 10. Number of identified plant items recovered from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 11. Average number of identified taxa per phase. -- Table 12. Taxa identified in samples from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Animal husbandry and environment -- Bone preservation and recovery -- Table 13. Preservation conditions at the two sites. -- The faunal remains -- Table 14. Percentages of species based upon counts of identified bones. -- Table 15. Proportions of domestic species by mandible count*. -- Table 16. Ratio of identified caprine mandibles to identified limb bones at various sites. -- The mammalian species found at Pokrovnik and Danilo -- Domestic Species -- Pig, Sus scrofa. -- Sheep, Ovis musimon, and Goat, Capra aegagrus -- Cattle, Bos taurus -- The wild species -- Red deer, Cervus elaphus -- Roe deer, Capreolus capreolus -- The hare, Lepus capensis -- Table 17. Ages of cattle from Pokrovnik and Danilo. -- Table 18. Measurements of hare bones (mm) -- The fauna of Pokrovnik and Danilo: environmental and economic considerations -- Marine shells -- Materials, methods and results -- Discussion -- Conclusions -- Table 19. Bivalve shells by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 20. Finds of bivalve shell fragments by taxa collected in the excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Table 21. Bivalve shells and shell fragments found by taxa collected in excavations at Danilo in 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Table 22. Bivalve taxa collected in research at Danilo in 1953, 2004 and 2005, and at Pokrovnik in 2006. -- Geomorphology and soils in the vicinity of Danilo and Pokrovnik -- Paleoclimatic and physiographic setting -- Site pedology and geomorphology -- Contemporary vegetation around Danilo and Pokrovnik -- The agricultural survey -- Commentary on results achieved thus far and their significance -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="650" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Excavations (Archaeology)</subfield><subfield code="z">Croatia</subfield><subfield code="z">Dalmatia.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="651" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Dalmatia (Croatia)</subfield><subfield code="x">Antiquities.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="z">1-78969-158-3</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="906" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">BOOK</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="ADM" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">2024-05-22 09:02:37 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="f">System</subfield><subfield code="c">marc21</subfield><subfield code="a">2019-08-10 22:08:00 Europe/Vienna</subfield><subfield code="g">false</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="AVE" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="i">Archaeopress</subfield><subfield code="P">Archaeopress complete</subfield><subfield code="x">https://eu02.alma.exlibrisgroup.com/view/uresolver/43ACC_OEAW/openurl?u.ignore_date_coverage=true&amp;portfolio_pid=5355433530004498&amp;Force_direct=true</subfield><subfield code="Z">5355433530004498</subfield><subfield code="b">Available</subfield><subfield code="8">5355433530004498</subfield></datafield></record></collection>