Retrieving, Curating and Depositing Skulls at Pitted Ware culture Sites

Q1 Arts and Humanities
T. Lindström
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

At many Middle Neolithic sites in south-central Scandinavia associated with the hunter-gatherer complex known as the Pitted Ware culture, the skulls of humans and animals seem to have been treated differently from other skeletal elements. This is evident, for example, in inhumation graves lacking crania or entire skulls as well as numerous finds of cranial and mandibular fragments scattered in cultural layers or deposited in hearths and pits. Despite parallels in overall treatment and find contexts, the selective handling of human skulls has generally been regarded as a mortuary practice and thus qualitatively different from the handling of animal skulls. Focusing primarily on the head bones themselves and relating their treatment to the wider use of skeletal remains allows us to consider a more complex system of retrieving, modifying, curating and depositing crania and mandibles. Drawing on the overlapping general treatment of human and animal remains, it is suggested that head bones from both humans and animals were efficacious objects that could be used in depositional acts.
在坑器文化遗址检索、策展和存放头骨
在斯堪的纳维亚半岛中南部的许多新石器时代中期遗址中,人类和动物的头骨似乎与其他骨骼元素的处理方式不同,这些遗址与被称为坑器文化的狩猎采集者综合体有关。这一点很明显,例如,在没有头盖骨或整个头盖骨的人葬坟墓中,以及在文化层中散落或沉积在壁炉和坑中的大量头盖骨和下颌碎片的发现。尽管在整体处理和发现背景方面有相似之处,但有选择地处理人类头骨通常被认为是一种太平间的做法,因此与处理动物头骨在质量上有所不同。主要关注头骨本身,并将其治疗与骨骼遗骸的广泛使用联系起来,使我们能够考虑一个更复杂的系统,包括检索,修改,管理和存放头骨和下颌骨。根据对人类和动物遗骸重叠的一般处理,这表明人类和动物的头骨都是有效的物体,可以用于沉积行为。
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来源期刊
Current Swedish Archaeology
Current Swedish Archaeology Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
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0
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