Prehistoric Technologies and Hunter-Gatherer
Landscapes: Towards new archaeologies of the Mesolithic and Earlier Neolithic
Session Organisers: Danny Hind & Graeme Warren
(University of Sheffield)
The Mesolithic and Early Neolithic
periods in Britain may initially appear as barren ground for narratives
informed by social theory. The archaeologist is confronted with extended
time scales and a scanty data set comprised mainly of lithics and environmental
evidence. In order to understand this period in the same frame of reference
as later prehistory we require an explicit theorisation of our practices,
drawing out the scales, contexts and materialities of Mesolithic and Earlier
Neolithic communities.
We must reconsider what questions it
is appropriate to ask of our evidence. More specifically we will examine
the interface between two bodies of thought, anthropologically informed
landscape archaeology and recent developments in the theory of technology.
We feel that the nature of the evidence lends itself to these questions:
how do mobile communities incorporate raw material procurement into
their seasonal rounds? How is the chaîne opératoîre
manifested at a landscape level? At the same time an interrogation of our
exisiting models may be appropriate. How are spatial analyses being informed
by social models?
This session aims to provide a forum
for such theorisation, bringing together varied researchers. By working
through, and talking through, these issues we may approach a greater understanding
of how hunter-gatherer landscapes were inhabited. Contributions are listed
below.
Danny Hind and Graeme Warren
(Department of Prehistory and Archaeology,
University of Sheffield, Sheffield)
"Round up the usual suspects": a brief introduction
Bill Finlayson
(University of Edinburgh)
Stone tools within their landscape context
Regional hunter-gatherers studies
place dots within a resource filled landscape. Models support this by showing
how different ecotones within that landscape can be used in different seasons.
Although increasingly detailed, such models are driven by economic considerations.
They assume static, unchanging societies, when they may have been occupied
hundreds of years apart and reflect a more dynamic, shifting use of the
landscape over time. The role of the site is based on its landscape context,
rather than direct economic data. Such static resource based models create
an illusion of long term stability.
The most prolific data remains the
stone tools. We must look at this to understand the actions of people rather
than assume behaviour from the landscape facet occupied. Typology offers
little in understanding behaviour at this scale, while technology fails
to incorporate mobility and raw material accessibility.
Danny Hind
(University of Sheffield)
The Secret Life of Lydianite
The problems inherent in comparing
models of "Mesolithic" and "Neolithic" life are well documented; two traditions
of study each with different paradigms and priorities. What separates these
conceptual packages when theoretical prejudice is distilled, are disparities
in scale and the importance attributed to varying categories of evidence.
What they have in common is the production of stone tools embedded, it
is believed, in other suites of everyday activities, ways of doing things
at various temporal and spatial scales, some of which persist across "the
transition". It is from these things that the context for the emergence
of Neolithic ceremonial monuments and "complex artefacts" should be understood,
as well as the continental heritage. This paper will examine how such a
context might be recreated from the way reduction sequences and chaînes
opératoîres are manifest at a landscape level, with reference
to current research in the Derbyshire Peak.
Chantal Conneller
(University of Cambridge)
Fragmented Space? The hunter-gatherer landscape
of the Vale of Pickering
In this paper I shall attempt to confront
some of the implications I feel have arisen from my work on various spatial
aspects of the chaîne opératoîre in the Early
Mesolithic landscapes of the Vale of Pickering. I have found that using
an approach which breaks down the knapping process into a series of stages
(coupled with an excavation methodology that relies extensively on test
pits) has the consequence of breaking down the landscape - compartmentalising
it into a series of enclosed spaces ('sites' or 'activity areas'). I intend
to examine ways to counter this tendency in my work through theoretical
and anthropological explorations of landscape' and methodologies such as
refitting, to try and draw out the intensities, flows and interruptions
composing the 'taskscape'.
Robert Young
(School of Archaeological Studies,
Leicester University)
"Here's one I made earlier": some critical
thoughts on spatial models and Mesolithic settlement and land-use
This paper will draw on the author's
own research in the Pennine uplands of Northern England in an attempt to
produce a critical review of some of the seasonality/territoriality/resource
scheduling models that have been adopted as 'givens' in the reconstruction
of past resource exploitation and land-use. In particular the paper will
examine the range of assumptions that underpin these archaeological models
and will question the efficacy of transporting models wholesale from one
cultural context to another. Alternative forms of modelling will be examined
and different readings of the available data will be put forward.
Nyree Finlay
(University College Cork)
Deer Prudence: developing biographical strategies
for other Mesolithic narratives
Traditional narratives about the Mesolithic
privilege the role of the hunter and emphasise the importance of red deer
and subsistence in general. Central to the foundation of many of these
boys and arrows narratives is the interpretation of the microlith
solely as a projectile component. Such a view can no longer be sustained
on the basis of microwear and contextual evidence. This paper examines
the need to develop theoretical perspectives on lithic manufacture and
use during the Mesolithic that transcend subsistence as the dominant concern.
Taking the microlith as a focus several biographical scenarios are presented
and their archaeological implications discussed. The development of biographical
strategies offers a means to integrate the chaine-operatoire within a broader
theoretical remit than is currently the case. Biography provides a link
between the life-course of the artefact and the individuals using them;
enabling issues of gender and age to be integrated and addressed.
A G Brown
(University of Exeter)
Conceptualising Environmental and Social Change
in the Mesolithic and Early Neolithic
Interpretation of the Mesolithic/early
Neolithic record is dominated by binary oppositions, most obviously environmental
(natural) vs social causality. There are ways we might undermine this duality:
through the recognition of the dynamism of the environment during this
period, and through recent social theory which can help us conceptualise
the integral nature of human action and environment. Without excessive
reliance on anthropological analogies it would seem probably that Mesolithic
communities did not separate nature and human perception into different
realms and that ritual beliefs had a strong geo-teleological component.
In this light opportunism in a dynamic environment is in no way inferior
to resource scheduling or even environmental `management'. As landscapes
change not only do physical resources and opportunities change but so does
access to the ritual world. An example used here is an interpretation of
the forest clearing as a ritual space, not dissimilar to the constructed
spaces in the later Neolithic.
Brian Boyd
(University of Wales, Lampeter)
Animals and technologies in the epipalaeolithic
and neolithic Levant
In the Levant, as elsewhere, prehistoric
worked bone artefacts are routinely considered as being among the first
of the "domestic technologies", seen as secondary to lithic tools, and
associated with "crafts" (rather than "industries"), such as sewing, needlework,
and basketry, i.e. women's work. A critical sociology of prehistoric technology,
however, must place bone working in the wider context of people's perception
of animals. From the Natufian (ca. 12500bp), animals were used not only
as a food resource, but also began to provide the raw material for a wide
variety of worked bone implements, became the object of artistic representations,
and were occasionally incorporated in burials along with people. That is,
animal resources were now drawn into a much wider range of technologies
and relations. This increased association points to fundamental changes
in people's perception of animals, taking place at the very beginnings
of domestication. This paper will explore the possible nature of these
changes, and discusses the implications for the making of the subsequent
neolithic.
Graeme Warren
(University of Sheffield)
Invisible Traces and half-seen Places: thoughts
on landscapes of the Mesolithic
Traditional models of Mesolithic life
are based on observed phenomena. Yet it is arguable that it is precisely
this which has led to major difficulties in marrying the study of stone
tools with wider social concerns. Put simply, the visible may not be a
sufficient basis from which to create engaging narratives. I will examine
some other ways in which we might look at our evidence, using the overlapping
analytical categories of trace, as developed by Walter Benjamin, and place,
as characterised by Toren Hågerstrand and Allan Pred. I will propose
a series of alternative descriptions of the seemingly mundane evidence
which we face, suggesting that there are more pertinent histories within
it.