Afanasievo Settlement Archaeology in the Altai Republic

Author(s): Taylor Hermes

Year: 2024

Summary

This is an abstract from the "Steppe by Steppe: Advances in the Archaeology of Eastern Eurasia" session, at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

The Afanasievo culture in the Altai Mountains (ca. 3300–2800 BCE) has long captured our attention as the first pastoralists to spread to Inner Asia. Known almost exclusively through osteological remains and material culture from mortuary contexts, settlement data have remained scarce for characterizing the subsistence economy, access to domesticated horses, and interaction with Indigenous hunter-gatherer communities in the Altai region. Recent excavations by the Rise of the Altai Mountain Pastoralism Project (RAMPP) at Nizhnyaya Sooru located in the Altai Republic provide a rich record of Afanasievo domestic deposition, architectural remains, and occupational history, representing a well-preserved and high-use settlement. Utilizing a range of analytical approaches, including zooarchaeology, ZooMS, faunal stable isotope analysis, paleoethnobotany, human and animal paleogenomics, radiocarbon dating, and material culture analysis, the RAMPP team provides a close examination of Afanasievo daily life that has so far foiled understandings of how early pastoralists settled in the Altai and connected to new environments and social landscapes of local hunter-gatherers.

Cite this Record

Afanasievo Settlement Archaeology in the Altai Republic. Taylor Hermes. Presented at The 89th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2024 ( tDAR id: 498810)

Keywords

Geographic Keywords
Asia: Central Asia

Spatial Coverage

min long: 46.143; min lat: 28.768 ; max long: 87.627; max lat: 54.877 ;

Record Identifiers

Abstract Id(s): 39950.0