Hans Vandendriessche, C. Guéret, Kim Aluwé, Liesbeth Messiaen, F. Cruz, Annelies Storme, L. Allemeersch, W. V. Neer, Joris Sergant, P. Crombé
{"title":"Kerkhove(比利时)schelde边缘两千年的中石器时代职业:第一种古人种学方法","authors":"Hans Vandendriessche, C. Guéret, Kim Aluwé, Liesbeth Messiaen, F. Cruz, Annelies Storme, L. Allemeersch, W. V. Neer, Joris Sergant, P. Crombé","doi":"10.3406/bspf.2019.15001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"English17 Mesolithic artefact loci were discovered on an alluvial levee during recent excavations at the wetland site of Kerkhove, located in the Scheldt floodplain at about 20 km from the French border. On typochronological grounds, these artefact loci are mainly dated to the Early Mesolithic, already well known from previous large-scale excavations in the lower Scheldt basin, but also to the lesser known Middle and Late Mesolithic periods. The first occupation phase proved to be the most intense and lasted from the middle of the 11th to the middle of the 10th millennium cal BP, based on a series of 19 14C-dates on single entity charred hazelnut shells. At least 9 different artefact loci belonging to this period were documented, covering either small ( 100 m2). The microlith compositions of most of these clusters were dominated by triangles and points with retouched base, corresponding to the regional assemblage type of the « Chinru group ». The second occupation phase, the Middle Mesolithic, was harder to define spatially, due to its location on the western edge of the excavation area and to its partial admixture with Early Mesolithic artefacts at specific locations. Nevertheless, three distinct artefact loci were discovered, characterised by the presence of numerous small backed bladelets combined with occasional points with invasive retouch on the one hand and by a different exploitation of lithic raw material resources on the other hand. Besides these more traditional clusters, several discrete concentrations of armatures were located in the low-density areas to the west of the most important Middle Mesolithic occupation zone. Unfortunately, this Middle Mesolithic occupational phase could not be directly dated by ecofacts associated with the artefact loci. However, two dates on unburnt faunal remains recovered from the colluvial deposits on the slope of the levee, indicate that this Middle Mesolithic occupation could date to as early as the second part of the 10th millennium cal BP, at the very beginning of the Middle Mesolithic period. Finally, the last occupation of the site dates to the Late Mesolithic and is only represented by one artefact locus, that contained regular Wommersom quartzite and flint bladelets associated with a few trapezes. Unfortunately, no absolute dates were obtained for this cluster to corroborate and specify its chronological position. This being said, the Kerkhove site offers the advantage, compared to previously excavated sites, that it allows us to study evolutions in lithic typology, lithic technology, tool-uses and the exploitation of lithic raw materials and other types of natural resources from a multi-period perspective. Indeed, besides lithics, considerable amounts of carbonized hazelnut shells and faunal remains were recovered, the latter consisting not only of heavily burnt bone fragments but also numerous unburnt remains. This particular feature of the site is unprecedented within the Early to Late Mesolithic of northern Belgium and allows us for the first time to reconstruct the subsistence behaviour of the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of the Scheldt basin. Furthermore, the detailed excavation methodology applied, allows for a high-resolution intra-site analysis including not only the spatially well-defined artefact loci but also the areas in between, characterized by the occurrence of small and a low-density artefact clusters. The most interesting preliminary results consist of the striking differences between the distinct occupations phases of the sites on several levels, from the general layout and spatial organisation, over site-function, raw material procurement to the exploitation of animal and plant resources. These differences are particularly outspoken when comparing the Early and Middle Mesolithic occupation of the site. The Early Mesolithic occupation appears homogeneous and is mainly characterised by the use of Scheldt flint, the systematic presence of carbonised hazelnut shells, the almost systematic presence of hearths in the clusters and the functional organisation of space, that doesn’t show contrasts between the individual clusters. Moreover, medium-sized mammals like wild boar and roe deer dominate these assemblages and they are to a lesser extent accompanied by fur-animals such as pine marten. By contrast, the layout and the general use of space of the Middle Mesolithic occupation seems to diverge completely from this picture. From this time onwards, Wommersom quartzite is imported and the use of the Scheldt flint is largely abandoned in favour of a grey-brown translucent and more fine-grained flint, probably indicating a change in the social territorial boundaries of the groups occupying the site of Kerkhove. Besides this, from a functional point of view, the clusters clearly contrast with one another and seem to form special activity areas, although it remains to be proven whether they are complementary special activity areas from one and the same larger campsite or if they are non-contemporaneous, individually functioning clusters. Furthermore, hearth features and carbonised hazelnut shells are completely absent from these artefact loci. Finally, in addition to the exploitation of wild boar, roe deer, red deer and fur animals, from the Middle Mesolithic onwards, we have indications for the consumption of freshwater fish at the site, in the form of burnt fish remains associated with the aforementioned discrete armature clusters. francaisLa fouille recente du gisement alluvial de Kerkhove (Belgique), situe dans la vallee de l’Escaut, a une vingtaine de kilometres de la frontiere francaise, a permis de mettre au jour 17 locus mesolithiques. D’apres les donnees typochronologiques et les datations absolues, ces locus datent non seulement du Mesolithique ancien, mais aussi du Mesolithique moyen et recent. La premiere phase d’occupation de la levee alluviale, datee du 11e et 10e millenaire avant le present (cal BP), a clairement ete la plus intensive. Elle correspond a un Mesolithique ancien caracterise par des assemblages du « groupe de Chinru », domines par les triangles et les pointes a base retouchee. La deuxieme phase d’occupation, celle du Mesolithique moyen, compte trois locus et est caracterisee par de nombreuses lamelles etroites a bord abattu, et des pointes a retouche couvrante d’une part, et par une exploitation de matieres premieres siliceuses differentes d’autre part. La derniere phase d’occupation date du Mesolithique recent. Elle est representee par un seul locus qui a livre de nombreux artefacts en gres-quartzite de Wommersom, quelques trapezes et des lamelles plus regulieres. Le principal interet du site de Kerkhove est la possibilite d’etudier tous les aspects de l’industrie lithique, mais egalement l’exploitation des matieres premieres siliceuses et des autres ressources naturelles dans une large perspective diachronique. En effet, hors vestiges lithiques, des quantites considerables de coquilles de noisettes carbonisees et de restes fauniques ont ete recuperees. En plus de la presence d’ossements brules, des restes fauniques non brules sont egalement conserves, situation inedite pour le Mesolithique ancien, moyen et recent du nord de la Belgique. Ainsi, les ossements de sanglier et de chevreuil dominent les assemblages du Mesolithique ancien et sont associes a des restes d’animaux a fourrures, tandis que les contextes du Mesolithique moyen livrent des indices frequents de consommation de poissons sur le site.","PeriodicalId":375388,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"8","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Deux millénaires d’occupations mésolithiques au bord de l’Escaut à Kerkhove (Belgique) : première approche palethnographique\",\"authors\":\"Hans Vandendriessche, C. Guéret, Kim Aluwé, Liesbeth Messiaen, F. Cruz, Annelies Storme, L. Allemeersch, W. V. Neer, Joris Sergant, P. Crombé\",\"doi\":\"10.3406/bspf.2019.15001\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"English17 Mesolithic artefact loci were discovered on an alluvial levee during recent excavations at the wetland site of Kerkhove, located in the Scheldt floodplain at about 20 km from the French border. On typochronological grounds, these artefact loci are mainly dated to the Early Mesolithic, already well known from previous large-scale excavations in the lower Scheldt basin, but also to the lesser known Middle and Late Mesolithic periods. The first occupation phase proved to be the most intense and lasted from the middle of the 11th to the middle of the 10th millennium cal BP, based on a series of 19 14C-dates on single entity charred hazelnut shells. At least 9 different artefact loci belonging to this period were documented, covering either small ( 100 m2). The microlith compositions of most of these clusters were dominated by triangles and points with retouched base, corresponding to the regional assemblage type of the « Chinru group ». The second occupation phase, the Middle Mesolithic, was harder to define spatially, due to its location on the western edge of the excavation area and to its partial admixture with Early Mesolithic artefacts at specific locations. Nevertheless, three distinct artefact loci were discovered, characterised by the presence of numerous small backed bladelets combined with occasional points with invasive retouch on the one hand and by a different exploitation of lithic raw material resources on the other hand. Besides these more traditional clusters, several discrete concentrations of armatures were located in the low-density areas to the west of the most important Middle Mesolithic occupation zone. Unfortunately, this Middle Mesolithic occupational phase could not be directly dated by ecofacts associated with the artefact loci. However, two dates on unburnt faunal remains recovered from the colluvial deposits on the slope of the levee, indicate that this Middle Mesolithic occupation could date to as early as the second part of the 10th millennium cal BP, at the very beginning of the Middle Mesolithic period. Finally, the last occupation of the site dates to the Late Mesolithic and is only represented by one artefact locus, that contained regular Wommersom quartzite and flint bladelets associated with a few trapezes. Unfortunately, no absolute dates were obtained for this cluster to corroborate and specify its chronological position. This being said, the Kerkhove site offers the advantage, compared to previously excavated sites, that it allows us to study evolutions in lithic typology, lithic technology, tool-uses and the exploitation of lithic raw materials and other types of natural resources from a multi-period perspective. Indeed, besides lithics, considerable amounts of carbonized hazelnut shells and faunal remains were recovered, the latter consisting not only of heavily burnt bone fragments but also numerous unburnt remains. This particular feature of the site is unprecedented within the Early to Late Mesolithic of northern Belgium and allows us for the first time to reconstruct the subsistence behaviour of the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of the Scheldt basin. Furthermore, the detailed excavation methodology applied, allows for a high-resolution intra-site analysis including not only the spatially well-defined artefact loci but also the areas in between, characterized by the occurrence of small and a low-density artefact clusters. The most interesting preliminary results consist of the striking differences between the distinct occupations phases of the sites on several levels, from the general layout and spatial organisation, over site-function, raw material procurement to the exploitation of animal and plant resources. These differences are particularly outspoken when comparing the Early and Middle Mesolithic occupation of the site. The Early Mesolithic occupation appears homogeneous and is mainly characterised by the use of Scheldt flint, the systematic presence of carbonised hazelnut shells, the almost systematic presence of hearths in the clusters and the functional organisation of space, that doesn’t show contrasts between the individual clusters. Moreover, medium-sized mammals like wild boar and roe deer dominate these assemblages and they are to a lesser extent accompanied by fur-animals such as pine marten. By contrast, the layout and the general use of space of the Middle Mesolithic occupation seems to diverge completely from this picture. From this time onwards, Wommersom quartzite is imported and the use of the Scheldt flint is largely abandoned in favour of a grey-brown translucent and more fine-grained flint, probably indicating a change in the social territorial boundaries of the groups occupying the site of Kerkhove. Besides this, from a functional point of view, the clusters clearly contrast with one another and seem to form special activity areas, although it remains to be proven whether they are complementary special activity areas from one and the same larger campsite or if they are non-contemporaneous, individually functioning clusters. Furthermore, hearth features and carbonised hazelnut shells are completely absent from these artefact loci. Finally, in addition to the exploitation of wild boar, roe deer, red deer and fur animals, from the Middle Mesolithic onwards, we have indications for the consumption of freshwater fish at the site, in the form of burnt fish remains associated with the aforementioned discrete armature clusters. francaisLa fouille recente du gisement alluvial de Kerkhove (Belgique), situe dans la vallee de l’Escaut, a une vingtaine de kilometres de la frontiere francaise, a permis de mettre au jour 17 locus mesolithiques. D’apres les donnees typochronologiques et les datations absolues, ces locus datent non seulement du Mesolithique ancien, mais aussi du Mesolithique moyen et recent. La premiere phase d’occupation de la levee alluviale, datee du 11e et 10e millenaire avant le present (cal BP), a clairement ete la plus intensive. Elle correspond a un Mesolithique ancien caracterise par des assemblages du « groupe de Chinru », domines par les triangles et les pointes a base retouchee. La deuxieme phase d’occupation, celle du Mesolithique moyen, compte trois locus et est caracterisee par de nombreuses lamelles etroites a bord abattu, et des pointes a retouche couvrante d’une part, et par une exploitation de matieres premieres siliceuses differentes d’autre part. La derniere phase d’occupation date du Mesolithique recent. Elle est representee par un seul locus qui a livre de nombreux artefacts en gres-quartzite de Wommersom, quelques trapezes et des lamelles plus regulieres. Le principal interet du site de Kerkhove est la possibilite d’etudier tous les aspects de l’industrie lithique, mais egalement l’exploitation des matieres premieres siliceuses et des autres ressources naturelles dans une large perspective diachronique. En effet, hors vestiges lithiques, des quantites considerables de coquilles de noisettes carbonisees et de restes fauniques ont ete recuperees. En plus de la presence d’ossements brules, des restes fauniques non brules sont egalement conserves, situation inedite pour le Mesolithique ancien, moyen et recent du nord de la Belgique. Ainsi, les ossements de sanglier et de chevreuil dominent les assemblages du Mesolithique ancien et sont associes a des restes d’animaux a fourrures, tandis que les contextes du Mesolithique moyen livrent des indices frequents de consommation de poissons sur le site.\",\"PeriodicalId\":375388,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française\",\"volume\":\"1 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"1900-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"8\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.3406/bspf.2019.15001\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3406/bspf.2019.15001","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 8
摘要
最近在Kerkhove湿地遗址的冲积堤上发现了17中石器时代的人工制品遗址,该遗址位于距离法国边境约20公里的Scheldt洪泛平原。从排印年代学的角度来看,这些人工制品的位置主要可以追溯到中石器时代早期,从之前在舍尔德盆地下游进行的大规模发掘中,人们已经知道了这一点,但也可以追溯到鲜为人知的中石器时代中期和晚期。根据对单个烧焦榛子壳的19个14c年代测定,第一个占领阶段被证明是最激烈的,从公元前11世纪中期持续到公元前10世纪中期。至少有9个属于这一时期的不同的人工制品遗址被记录在案,覆盖面积很小(100平方米)。这些星系团的微石组成大多以三角形和带修饰基底的点为主,符合“金如群”的区域组合类型。第二个占领阶段,中石器时代中期,由于其位于挖掘区域的西部边缘,并且在特定地点与早期中石器时代的人工制品部分混合,因此在空间上更难定义。尽管如此,还是发现了三个不同的人工制品位点,其特征是一方面存在许多小的背片,结合偶尔的侵入性修饰点,另一方面是对石器原材料资源的不同开发。除了这些更传统的集群外,在中石器时代最重要的占领地带以西的低密度地区,还分布着几个离散的电枢集中地。不幸的是,这个中石器时代中期的职业阶段不能通过与人工制品位点相关的生态事实直接确定时间。然而,从堤岸斜坡上的崩塌沉积物中发现的两个未燃烧的动物遗骸的日期表明,这种中石器时代的占领可以追溯到早在公元前10千年的下半叶,即中石器时代的初期。最后,该遗址的最后一次占领可以追溯到中石器时代晚期,只有一个人工制品的所在地,其中包含规则的Wommersom石英岩和燧石小片,以及一些秋千。不幸的是,没有获得这个星团的绝对日期来证实和说明它的时间位置。话虽如此,与之前挖掘的遗址相比,Kerkhove遗址的优势在于,它使我们能够从多时期的角度研究石器类型学、石器技术、工具使用和石器原材料的开发以及其他类型的自然资源的演变。事实上,除了石器之外,还发现了大量碳化的榛子壳和动物遗骸,后者不仅包括严重烧焦的骨头碎片,还包括许多未烧焦的遗骸。该遗址的这一特殊特征在比利时北部中石器时代早期到晚期是前所未有的,这使我们第一次能够重建斯海尔特盆地中石器时代狩猎采集者的生存行为。此外,采用了详细的挖掘方法,可以进行高分辨率的遗址内分析,不仅包括空间上定义明确的人工制品位点,还包括两者之间的区域,其特点是出现了小而低密度的人工制品集群。最有趣的初步结果是,从总体布局和空间组织、场地功能、原材料采购到动物和植物资源的开发,在几个层面上,不同职业阶段之间的显著差异。在比较中石器时代早期和中期对该遗址的占领时,这些差异尤其明显。中石器时代早期的活动似乎是同质的,主要特征是使用斯海尔特燧石,有系统地出现碳化的榛子壳,几乎有系统地在集群中出现壁炉和空间的功能组织,这没有显示出单个集群之间的对比。此外,中型哺乳动物,如野猪和狍,在这些组合中占主导地位,它们在较小程度上伴随着毛皮动物,如松貂。相比之下,中石器时代中期的布局和空间的一般使用似乎与这幅图完全不同。从那时起,Wommersom石英岩被进口,Scheldt燧石的使用基本上被放弃,取而代之的是一种灰棕色半透明的、更细粒度的燧石,这可能表明占据Kerkhove遗址的群体的社会领土边界发生了变化。 除此之外,从功能的角度来看,这些集群之间明显形成对比,似乎形成了特殊活动区,尽管它们是来自同一个较大营地的互补的特殊活动区,还是非同期的单独功能集群,还有待证明。此外,壁炉的特征和碳化的榛子壳在这些人工制品的位置上完全不存在。最后,除了对野猪、狍、马鹿和毛皮动物的开采,从中石器时代中期开始,我们还发现了该遗址食用淡水鱼的迹象,其形式是与上述离散的电枢簇相关的烧焦鱼遗骸。法国克尔霍夫冲积区(比利时)、埃斯考特山谷、法国边境公里的一个葡萄树、17个中石器遗址的一个米许可证。D 'apres les donnees typychronologiques et les datations absolues, ce locus datent non - seulement du中石器时代古,mais aussi du中石器时代晚期和近代。首演阶段d 'occupation de La levee冲积层,日期为11月11日至10月10日,千年前的现在(称为BP),一个索赔加密集。它们与中石器时代的古代特征相对应,它们的特征是“群”、“三角形”和“尖”。La deuxieme phase d 'occupation, cell du mesolithic moyen, complete trois locus et est characterisee par de nombreuses lamelles etroites a board abattu, et des pointes a retouche coute d 'une part, et par une exploitation de matieres premieres siliceuses differenturepart。中石器时代晚期La derniere占位期。最具代表性的是一种典型的自然景观,包括温默索姆的绿石英岩、que - trapezes、des - lamelles和规则。Le principal interterdu site de Kerkhove以一个大的视角历时性地考察了“工业岩石”的可能性、“材料”的开采、“材料”的开采、“自然资源”的开采。结果是,我们的足迹和数量都是相当可观的,我们的足迹和碳的足迹都是独一无二的,我们的足迹都是独一无二的。En plus de la presence d ' osdes rules, des restes faques non - rules sonegalement conserves, situation inite pour le mesolique ancient, moyen et recent du nord de la Belgique。例如,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合,中石器时代的古岩石和古岩石的组合。
Deux millénaires d’occupations mésolithiques au bord de l’Escaut à Kerkhove (Belgique) : première approche palethnographique
English17 Mesolithic artefact loci were discovered on an alluvial levee during recent excavations at the wetland site of Kerkhove, located in the Scheldt floodplain at about 20 km from the French border. On typochronological grounds, these artefact loci are mainly dated to the Early Mesolithic, already well known from previous large-scale excavations in the lower Scheldt basin, but also to the lesser known Middle and Late Mesolithic periods. The first occupation phase proved to be the most intense and lasted from the middle of the 11th to the middle of the 10th millennium cal BP, based on a series of 19 14C-dates on single entity charred hazelnut shells. At least 9 different artefact loci belonging to this period were documented, covering either small ( 100 m2). The microlith compositions of most of these clusters were dominated by triangles and points with retouched base, corresponding to the regional assemblage type of the « Chinru group ». The second occupation phase, the Middle Mesolithic, was harder to define spatially, due to its location on the western edge of the excavation area and to its partial admixture with Early Mesolithic artefacts at specific locations. Nevertheless, three distinct artefact loci were discovered, characterised by the presence of numerous small backed bladelets combined with occasional points with invasive retouch on the one hand and by a different exploitation of lithic raw material resources on the other hand. Besides these more traditional clusters, several discrete concentrations of armatures were located in the low-density areas to the west of the most important Middle Mesolithic occupation zone. Unfortunately, this Middle Mesolithic occupational phase could not be directly dated by ecofacts associated with the artefact loci. However, two dates on unburnt faunal remains recovered from the colluvial deposits on the slope of the levee, indicate that this Middle Mesolithic occupation could date to as early as the second part of the 10th millennium cal BP, at the very beginning of the Middle Mesolithic period. Finally, the last occupation of the site dates to the Late Mesolithic and is only represented by one artefact locus, that contained regular Wommersom quartzite and flint bladelets associated with a few trapezes. Unfortunately, no absolute dates were obtained for this cluster to corroborate and specify its chronological position. This being said, the Kerkhove site offers the advantage, compared to previously excavated sites, that it allows us to study evolutions in lithic typology, lithic technology, tool-uses and the exploitation of lithic raw materials and other types of natural resources from a multi-period perspective. Indeed, besides lithics, considerable amounts of carbonized hazelnut shells and faunal remains were recovered, the latter consisting not only of heavily burnt bone fragments but also numerous unburnt remains. This particular feature of the site is unprecedented within the Early to Late Mesolithic of northern Belgium and allows us for the first time to reconstruct the subsistence behaviour of the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of the Scheldt basin. Furthermore, the detailed excavation methodology applied, allows for a high-resolution intra-site analysis including not only the spatially well-defined artefact loci but also the areas in between, characterized by the occurrence of small and a low-density artefact clusters. The most interesting preliminary results consist of the striking differences between the distinct occupations phases of the sites on several levels, from the general layout and spatial organisation, over site-function, raw material procurement to the exploitation of animal and plant resources. These differences are particularly outspoken when comparing the Early and Middle Mesolithic occupation of the site. The Early Mesolithic occupation appears homogeneous and is mainly characterised by the use of Scheldt flint, the systematic presence of carbonised hazelnut shells, the almost systematic presence of hearths in the clusters and the functional organisation of space, that doesn’t show contrasts between the individual clusters. Moreover, medium-sized mammals like wild boar and roe deer dominate these assemblages and they are to a lesser extent accompanied by fur-animals such as pine marten. By contrast, the layout and the general use of space of the Middle Mesolithic occupation seems to diverge completely from this picture. From this time onwards, Wommersom quartzite is imported and the use of the Scheldt flint is largely abandoned in favour of a grey-brown translucent and more fine-grained flint, probably indicating a change in the social territorial boundaries of the groups occupying the site of Kerkhove. Besides this, from a functional point of view, the clusters clearly contrast with one another and seem to form special activity areas, although it remains to be proven whether they are complementary special activity areas from one and the same larger campsite or if they are non-contemporaneous, individually functioning clusters. Furthermore, hearth features and carbonised hazelnut shells are completely absent from these artefact loci. Finally, in addition to the exploitation of wild boar, roe deer, red deer and fur animals, from the Middle Mesolithic onwards, we have indications for the consumption of freshwater fish at the site, in the form of burnt fish remains associated with the aforementioned discrete armature clusters. francaisLa fouille recente du gisement alluvial de Kerkhove (Belgique), situe dans la vallee de l’Escaut, a une vingtaine de kilometres de la frontiere francaise, a permis de mettre au jour 17 locus mesolithiques. D’apres les donnees typochronologiques et les datations absolues, ces locus datent non seulement du Mesolithique ancien, mais aussi du Mesolithique moyen et recent. La premiere phase d’occupation de la levee alluviale, datee du 11e et 10e millenaire avant le present (cal BP), a clairement ete la plus intensive. Elle correspond a un Mesolithique ancien caracterise par des assemblages du « groupe de Chinru », domines par les triangles et les pointes a base retouchee. La deuxieme phase d’occupation, celle du Mesolithique moyen, compte trois locus et est caracterisee par de nombreuses lamelles etroites a bord abattu, et des pointes a retouche couvrante d’une part, et par une exploitation de matieres premieres siliceuses differentes d’autre part. La derniere phase d’occupation date du Mesolithique recent. Elle est representee par un seul locus qui a livre de nombreux artefacts en gres-quartzite de Wommersom, quelques trapezes et des lamelles plus regulieres. Le principal interet du site de Kerkhove est la possibilite d’etudier tous les aspects de l’industrie lithique, mais egalement l’exploitation des matieres premieres siliceuses et des autres ressources naturelles dans une large perspective diachronique. En effet, hors vestiges lithiques, des quantites considerables de coquilles de noisettes carbonisees et de restes fauniques ont ete recuperees. En plus de la presence d’ossements brules, des restes fauniques non brules sont egalement conserves, situation inedite pour le Mesolithique ancien, moyen et recent du nord de la Belgique. Ainsi, les ossements de sanglier et de chevreuil dominent les assemblages du Mesolithique ancien et sont associes a des restes d’animaux a fourrures, tandis que les contextes du Mesolithique moyen livrent des indices frequents de consommation de poissons sur le site.