书写新石器时代的英国:一次诠释之旅

Keith W. Ray, Julian Thomas
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摘要

距斯图尔特·皮戈特发表他的主要著作《不列颠群岛的新石器文化》刚刚过去60多年。这是第一次对这些岛屿上当时已知和假设的“新石器时代”进行全面的描述,它调查了发现并总结了上个世纪发生的争论。自从皮戈特开始写作以来,这种逐渐积累数据和思想的过程一直在快速进行,尤其是由于我们现在可以精确地确定新石器时代特征的许多活动的年代。20世纪50年代初,皮戈特写这本书的时候,美国人威拉德·利比(Willard Libby)正在试验放射性碳定年法,这是核技术发展的副产品。这种测年方法利用放射性同位素的衰变速率来测量有机物样本最后一次与其环境交换碳的时间——简而言之,就是有机体死亡的时间。这种方法的应用逐渐改变了我们对史前年代学的认识。为了说明对新石器时代英国研究的影响,我们只需要认识到,在新石器文化中,皮戈特想象了一个持续约500年的英国新石器时代,从公元前2000年左右开始。这个估计的跨度是基于一系列关于文化变迁速度的假设,以及英国、欧洲大陆和更远地区的人工制品之间的亲和力。然而,在过去的半个世纪里,随着放射性测年法的逐渐完善,以及大量的测年样本的积累,这种继承下来的年表被一扫而光。这些证据表明,新石器时代开始于公元前4000年之前不久的英国,并在公元前2400年左右随着各种金属而不是石头制成的物品的出现而“结束”。这种对新石器时代持续时间的认识的转变意义深远,因为当皮戈特和他的同时代人处理的历史时期与我们所熟悉的历史时期(罗马帝国的兴衰,伊斯兰教的出现和传播,资本主义的发展)相比较时,我们现在有证据表明,英国新石器时代人类活动的时间跨度是这些主要历史时期的三倍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Writing Neolithic Britain: an interpretive journey
It is just over sixty years since Stuart Piggott published his major work, Neolithic Cultures of the British Isles. This was the first comprehensive account of what was then known and assumed about the ‘New Stone Age’ in these islands, and it surveyed discoveries and summarized debates that had occurred over the previous century. This process of gradual accumulation of data and ideas has continued apace since Piggott was writing, not least owing to the precision with which we can now date much of the activity that characterizes the Neolithic. When Piggott was writing his book in the early 1950s an American, Willard Libby, was experimenting with the technique of radiocarbon dating as a by-product of the development of nuclear technology. This dating method uses the rate of decay of radioactive isotopes to measure the time that has elapsed since a sample of organic matter last exchanged carbon with its environment—in short, the time since an organism died. Application of the method has cumulatively transformed our understanding of prehistoric chronology. To illustrate the impact upon the study of Neolithic Britain, we have only to appreciate that in Neolithic Cultures Piggott imagined a British Neolithic period that lasted for around five hundred years, beginning in about 2000BCE. This estimated span was based on a series of assumptions about the rate of cultural change, and the affinities between artefacts in Britain, continental Europe, and further afield. However, over the past half-century this inherited chronology has been swept away as radiometric dating has gradually been refined, and huge numbers of dated samples have accumulated. These now suggest that the Neolithic period began in Britain shortly before 4000 BCE, and ‘ended’ with the advent of a variety of objects made of metal instead of stone, from around 2400 BCE. The implications of this transformed appreciation of the duration of the Neolithic are profound, for while Piggott and his contemporaries were dealing with periods of historical time that were comparable with those with which we are familiar from recorded history (the rise and fall of the Roman Empire, the emergence and spread of Islam, the development of capitalism), we now have evidence for human activity in the Neolithic of Britain that is dispersed across an expanse of time as much as three times longer than these major historical episodes.
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