Exploiting, Exchanging, and Establishing Boundaries: Lithic Trade during the Neolithic on the Great Hungarian Plain

Author(s): Danielle Riebe

Year: 2015

Summary

There has already been extensive analysis of Late Neolithic material culture on the Great Hungarian Plain. Much of that research, however, typically has been restricted to one site as opposed to multiple sites within a region. This paper explores assemblage variation in lithic materials from multiple sites across the Plain. By identifying differences in lithic materials, one can assess the extent to which lithics either reflect or even potentially reinforce social boundaries. In addition, building off of a study assessing ceramic stylistic and compositional variability from this period, this paper addresses how patterns of lithic long-distance trade and exchange relate to short-distance trade and exchange of ceramics in order to discern socio-cultural boundaries in the past.

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Cite this Record

Exploiting, Exchanging, and Establishing Boundaries: Lithic Trade during the Neolithic on the Great Hungarian Plain. Danielle Riebe. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 398034)

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Keywords

General
Lithics Neolithic Trade

Geographic Keywords
Europe

Spatial Coverage

min long: -11.074; min lat: 37.44 ; max long: 50.098; max lat: 70.845 ;