2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2014.02.023
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Eastern pioneers in westernmost territories? Current perspectives on Mesolithic hunter–gatherer large-scale interaction and migration within Northern Eurasia

Abstract: The aim of this paper is to present a dynamic approach to material culture that may inform new perspectives on large-scale hunter-gatherer interactions and migrations within Early Holocene northern Eurasia. Recent analyses of technological aspects on a large geographical scale, challenge previous research hypotheses that derive the Mesolithic of Norway from a purely West European late Palaeolithic tradition, and highlights the existence of cultural traits which were shared by a wide range of hunter-gatherers w… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…a BP the archaeological data indicate a migration across land from present‐day Russian territory into northern Finland and onto the NE coast of the investigation area (Rankama & Kankaanpää ; Sørensen et al . ; Damlien ; Günther et al . ).…”
Section: Results and Interpretationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…a BP the archaeological data indicate a migration across land from present‐day Russian territory into northern Finland and onto the NE coast of the investigation area (Rankama & Kankaanpää ; Sørensen et al . ; Damlien ; Günther et al . ).…”
Section: Results and Interpretationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The technological analysis conducted for the purpose of this study, shows that the lithic artifacts from the deep pit display clear affiliation with the eastern pressure blade technology, as documented from a large number of sites in northern and western Scandinavia, eastern Fennoscandia, and the East European Plain 9–11, 23 . No artefacts diagnostic to the preceding Early Mesolithic blade technology, that would indicate chronological or technological mixing, were observed (Supplementary note 1).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…This relatively large population would have enabled a rapid colonisation of the Norwegian coast in the Preboreal period (Berg-Hansen 2017). There is also growing evidence at the beginning of the Boreal period for the spread of new immigrants into northern Norway entering from the North East (Sørensen et al 2013;Damlien 2014Damlien , 2016Günther et al 2018).…”
Section: The North Sea Continent and The Postglacial Colonisation Of mentioning
confidence: 99%