The Cretan Mesolithic in context: new data from Livari Skiadi (SE Crete)
Author(s) -
Tristan Carter,
Danica D. Mihailović,
Yiannis Papadatos,
Chrysa Sofianou
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
documenta praehistorica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.587
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1854-2492
pISSN - 1408-967X
DOI - 10.4312/dp.43.3
Subject(s) - mesolithic , holocene , archaeology , context (archaeology) , geography , assemblage (archaeology) , hunter gatherer , population , demography , sociology
Investigations at Livari (south-eastern Crete) produced a small Mesolithic chipped stone assemblage, whose techno-typological characteristics situate it within an ‘early Holocene Aegean island lithic tradition’ (9000–7000 cal BC). The material provides antecedent characteristics for the lithics of Crete’s founder Neolithic population at Knossos (c. 7000–6500/6400 cal BC). The idiosyncrasies of the Knossian material can be viewed as a hybrid lithic tradition that emerged from interaction between migrant Anatolian farmers and indigenous hunter-gatherers. Small quantities of Melian obsidian at Livari attest to early Holocene maritime insular networks, knowledge of which likely enabled the first farmers’ successful voyage to Crete
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