M. Kocić, B. Hanks, Marijana Krstić, M. Bermann, Petra Basar, M. Mlyniec, Knez Mihailova Arts
{"title":"通过行人调查和考古地球物理勘探相结合,确定塞尔维亚Šumadija地区的早期新石器时代定居点","authors":"M. Kocić, B. Hanks, Marijana Krstić, M. Bermann, Petra Basar, M. Mlyniec, Knez Mihailova Arts","doi":"10.24916/iansa.2020.1.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The development of Neolithic lifeways represented fundamental shifts in social organization and human-environment relationships within local ecological settings. An understanding of this process in the Balkans peninsula has remained intriguing and challenging in the broader context of European prehistory. Evidence for Neolithization processes in the Balkans begins around the seventh millennium BC in the south-east at important tell sites such as Nea Nikomedia and Sesklo where rectangular house structures and other elements of the “Neolithic package” strongly resemble those of the Levant. The northern zone of the Balkans peninsula, however, presents a different situation, with small flat sites with intrusive later occupation making patterns of early Neolithization difficult to discern. This paper reports recent field research in Central Serbia (Šumadija region, Gruža River valley) where Early Neolithic occupation related to the Starčevo culture has been found at the newly identified site of Kneževac through systematic pedestrian survey, artifact spatial analysis, and near surface archaeological geophysics. The results of this research are discussed in the context of other Early Neolithic settlement evidence in the region, along with their implications for understanding early agricultural populations in Central Serbia. IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 10 found exactly above earlier Starčevo “pit-house” features (McPherron and Srejović, 1988). Unfortunately, due to heavy weathering of the early Phase I deposits, and subsequent intrusive occupation of the Divostin II phase, Phase I does not provide much additional information on the organization of early Starčevo culture settlements. Important new information about the Early Neolithic in the Central Balkans was generated in the 1980s by excavations at the site of Blagotin, situated in the Morava River valley (Stanković and Leković, 1993). There were large scale excavations completed in the 1980s at the sites of Paljevine and Grobnice, which are now located in the submerged zone of the Gruža Lake. Unfortunately, these sites (450 square meters of excavated area) were not published and the associated field reports are not available. The most recent archaeological excavation in the Morava River valley is the large-scale project at Drenovac; however, this is a multiperiod site with a very significant Vinča stratigraphic layer overlying the earlier phases/occupations at the site (Perić, 2016). Apart from these sites, other reported Early Neolithic sites are covered by later Vinča phase occupation and have only been subject to very limited excavation. This situation challenges any interpretation of the spatial organization of Early Neolithic sites in central Serbia and any attempts to reconstruct the important Starčevo to the later Vinča transition. Currently, one of the best sources of information on the organization of Starčevo communities in Serbia is the salvage excavation at the site of Jaričište I (Marić, 2013). A large expanse of this site was exposed through excavation, revealing concentrically grouped subterranean pit-houses and details of their construction, use, and maintenance (Marić, 2013). The site of Jaričište I indicates that Starčevo pit-houses were durable constructions, supporting interpretations that these were fixed, permanent occupations rather than ephemeral camp sites in the landscape. These early sites, therefore, represent important early domestic loci for examining emergent Neolithization trends in the Balkans. However, much more research is needed to better understand these early occupations, the community organization and regional settlement patterning, and use of local resources. It is important to note that there are indeed many similarities among Starčevo-Körös-Criș settlements across the central Balkans, including their spatial organization. Important field research, including archaeological geophysics, pedestrian survey, and stratigraphic excavation, has been completed at several Early Neolithic sites in Hungary and Romania and provide an important foundation of comparative data for interpreting early settlement sites in central Serbia (Bánffy, 2000; Green and Lawson, 2018; Bánffy, 2013). However, there also exist strong regional characteristics and patterns and it is difficult to make direct comparisons of central Serbian sites to contemporaneous sites in the Panonian Basin, which are over 400 kilometres away and in a completely different geomorphological zone. More research, therefore, is needed to examine such settlement patterning in Serbia and to address the many open questions regarding these Early Neolithic sites. In response to this, in 2016, the University of Pittsburgh and the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments in Kragujevac, Serbia, initiated a new program of cooperation focusing on systematic pedestrian survey coupled with multi-method archaeological geophysical surveys in the Šumadija region of central Serbia. To date, a total area of 102.47 km2 has been surveyed through systematic field walking (Kočić, 2019, doctoral dissertation research) and five Neolithic settlements have been investigated with multi-method geophysical surveys (total of 52 ha) through the Šumadija Regional Geospatial Archaeology Project (SRGAP). In the following sections, we discuss research at the site of Kneževac, which was identified through pedestrian survey and surface collection and spatial analysis by M. Kočić in 2017. Subsequent multiinstrument geophysics was conducted at the site by SRGAP in 2018 to further characterize the archaeological potential of the site. Further investigation and ground truthing will be conducted at Kneževac in 2020. 2. Pedestrian survey methods The methods employed for the regional scale pedestrian survey followed those associated with North American field archaeology traditions, which have been long influenced by a comparative focus on the emergence of sedentism and animal and plant domestication processes in different locations around the world. Reconstruction of settlement patterning as a way of interpreting demographic processes, catchment zones, and settlement hierarchies has been a common element in such studies (Carneiro, 1970; Earle, 1997). Historical property inheritance practices within the Šumadija region have led to the splitting of land parcels, resulting in virtually no large, open tracts of land to survey. The field methods utilized in the regional scale pedestrian survey drew on previously published methods (MacNeish et al., 1975; Hirth, 1980; Feinman and Nicholas, 1990) and more recent statistical approaches to sampling sites with dense concentrations of surface artifacts (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). The survey team maintained an objective target of approximately 50 ha of coverage per day but this varied depending on the sites encountered and density of associated surface artifacts. Most of the survey zone was made up of open tilled fields and field walking was done over the course of a calendar year and multiple seasons. This ensured that the surface visibility of artifacts was excellent in fields that had been recently tilled or left fallow through the winter. The survey team was comprised of a line of five members who walked together systematically while spaced 20 m apart. Handheld GPS units were utilized to record the beginning and end of each transect. The primary collection units were 1-hectare cells, which were further divided into sub-cell collection units of 20×20 m. These units were sampled using a 1.81 m radius “dog-leash” collection circle, which provided a 10 m2 IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 11 sample, thereby limiting the total number of artifacts that needed to be collected for spatial analysis (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). In total, 27,754 artifacts were collected during the regional survey and this included full coverage of two large Neolithic settlements (Grivac and Kusovac, each approximately 35 ha) with evidence of Early to Late Neolithic occupation (Starčevo and Vinča) and a third site, Kneževac (approximately 6 ha in size), which displayed only Early Neolithic occupation (Starčevo) (Figure 1). In the following sections, we detail the results of research at Kneževac as this was the only Early Neolithic site identified with no later intrusive Neolithic occupations. 3. The Kneževac settlement This site was largely undocumented in the scientific literature other than from verbal reports of Neolithic potsherds being found in fields by local villagers (Bogdanović, 1983). No subsequent archaeological survey or test excavations were undertaken in the area to try and locate the site. The regional pedestrian survey in 2017 identified a spatial cluster of Starčevo type pottery near the northernmost part of the historical Kneževac village. The site is situated along a gentle slope that represents the first outcrops of the foothills of the Rudnik Mountain. There is one active freshwater spring within the site, another in the immediate vicinity, and two small creeks running on both sides. The soil on the site is vertisol-smonitza, which is also found in the immediate vicinity of the site, and the adjacent creek areas. The surrounding higher flatlands are comprised of the cambisol gajnjača soil type, which has a relatively low agricultural production yield. Even today, higher flatland crops are more dispersed than in the lower parts of the valley where the soils are more productive. A total of 436 artifa","PeriodicalId":38054,"journal":{"name":"Interdisciplinaria Archaeologica","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection\",\"authors\":\"M. Kocić, B. Hanks, Marijana Krstić, M. Bermann, Petra Basar, M. Mlyniec, Knez Mihailova Arts\",\"doi\":\"10.24916/iansa.2020.1.1\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The development of Neolithic lifeways represented fundamental shifts in social organization and human-environment relationships within local ecological settings. An understanding of this process in the Balkans peninsula has remained intriguing and challenging in the broader context of European prehistory. Evidence for Neolithization processes in the Balkans begins around the seventh millennium BC in the south-east at important tell sites such as Nea Nikomedia and Sesklo where rectangular house structures and other elements of the “Neolithic package” strongly resemble those of the Levant. The northern zone of the Balkans peninsula, however, presents a different situation, with small flat sites with intrusive later occupation making patterns of early Neolithization difficult to discern. This paper reports recent field research in Central Serbia (Šumadija region, Gruža River valley) where Early Neolithic occupation related to the Starčevo culture has been found at the newly identified site of Kneževac through systematic pedestrian survey, artifact spatial analysis, and near surface archaeological geophysics. The results of this research are discussed in the context of other Early Neolithic settlement evidence in the region, along with their implications for understanding early agricultural populations in Central Serbia. IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 10 found exactly above earlier Starčevo “pit-house” features (McPherron and Srejović, 1988). Unfortunately, due to heavy weathering of the early Phase I deposits, and subsequent intrusive occupation of the Divostin II phase, Phase I does not provide much additional information on the organization of early Starčevo culture settlements. Important new information about the Early Neolithic in the Central Balkans was generated in the 1980s by excavations at the site of Blagotin, situated in the Morava River valley (Stanković and Leković, 1993). There were large scale excavations completed in the 1980s at the sites of Paljevine and Grobnice, which are now located in the submerged zone of the Gruža Lake. Unfortunately, these sites (450 square meters of excavated area) were not published and the associated field reports are not available. The most recent archaeological excavation in the Morava River valley is the large-scale project at Drenovac; however, this is a multiperiod site with a very significant Vinča stratigraphic layer overlying the earlier phases/occupations at the site (Perić, 2016). Apart from these sites, other reported Early Neolithic sites are covered by later Vinča phase occupation and have only been subject to very limited excavation. This situation challenges any interpretation of the spatial organization of Early Neolithic sites in central Serbia and any attempts to reconstruct the important Starčevo to the later Vinča transition. Currently, one of the best sources of information on the organization of Starčevo communities in Serbia is the salvage excavation at the site of Jaričište I (Marić, 2013). A large expanse of this site was exposed through excavation, revealing concentrically grouped subterranean pit-houses and details of their construction, use, and maintenance (Marić, 2013). The site of Jaričište I indicates that Starčevo pit-houses were durable constructions, supporting interpretations that these were fixed, permanent occupations rather than ephemeral camp sites in the landscape. These early sites, therefore, represent important early domestic loci for examining emergent Neolithization trends in the Balkans. However, much more research is needed to better understand these early occupations, the community organization and regional settlement patterning, and use of local resources. It is important to note that there are indeed many similarities among Starčevo-Körös-Criș settlements across the central Balkans, including their spatial organization. Important field research, including archaeological geophysics, pedestrian survey, and stratigraphic excavation, has been completed at several Early Neolithic sites in Hungary and Romania and provide an important foundation of comparative data for interpreting early settlement sites in central Serbia (Bánffy, 2000; Green and Lawson, 2018; Bánffy, 2013). However, there also exist strong regional characteristics and patterns and it is difficult to make direct comparisons of central Serbian sites to contemporaneous sites in the Panonian Basin, which are over 400 kilometres away and in a completely different geomorphological zone. More research, therefore, is needed to examine such settlement patterning in Serbia and to address the many open questions regarding these Early Neolithic sites. In response to this, in 2016, the University of Pittsburgh and the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments in Kragujevac, Serbia, initiated a new program of cooperation focusing on systematic pedestrian survey coupled with multi-method archaeological geophysical surveys in the Šumadija region of central Serbia. To date, a total area of 102.47 km2 has been surveyed through systematic field walking (Kočić, 2019, doctoral dissertation research) and five Neolithic settlements have been investigated with multi-method geophysical surveys (total of 52 ha) through the Šumadija Regional Geospatial Archaeology Project (SRGAP). In the following sections, we discuss research at the site of Kneževac, which was identified through pedestrian survey and surface collection and spatial analysis by M. Kočić in 2017. Subsequent multiinstrument geophysics was conducted at the site by SRGAP in 2018 to further characterize the archaeological potential of the site. Further investigation and ground truthing will be conducted at Kneževac in 2020. 2. Pedestrian survey methods The methods employed for the regional scale pedestrian survey followed those associated with North American field archaeology traditions, which have been long influenced by a comparative focus on the emergence of sedentism and animal and plant domestication processes in different locations around the world. Reconstruction of settlement patterning as a way of interpreting demographic processes, catchment zones, and settlement hierarchies has been a common element in such studies (Carneiro, 1970; Earle, 1997). Historical property inheritance practices within the Šumadija region have led to the splitting of land parcels, resulting in virtually no large, open tracts of land to survey. The field methods utilized in the regional scale pedestrian survey drew on previously published methods (MacNeish et al., 1975; Hirth, 1980; Feinman and Nicholas, 1990) and more recent statistical approaches to sampling sites with dense concentrations of surface artifacts (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). The survey team maintained an objective target of approximately 50 ha of coverage per day but this varied depending on the sites encountered and density of associated surface artifacts. Most of the survey zone was made up of open tilled fields and field walking was done over the course of a calendar year and multiple seasons. This ensured that the surface visibility of artifacts was excellent in fields that had been recently tilled or left fallow through the winter. The survey team was comprised of a line of five members who walked together systematically while spaced 20 m apart. Handheld GPS units were utilized to record the beginning and end of each transect. The primary collection units were 1-hectare cells, which were further divided into sub-cell collection units of 20×20 m. These units were sampled using a 1.81 m radius “dog-leash” collection circle, which provided a 10 m2 IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 11 sample, thereby limiting the total number of artifacts that needed to be collected for spatial analysis (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). In total, 27,754 artifacts were collected during the regional survey and this included full coverage of two large Neolithic settlements (Grivac and Kusovac, each approximately 35 ha) with evidence of Early to Late Neolithic occupation (Starčevo and Vinča) and a third site, Kneževac (approximately 6 ha in size), which displayed only Early Neolithic occupation (Starčevo) (Figure 1). In the following sections, we detail the results of research at Kneževac as this was the only Early Neolithic site identified with no later intrusive Neolithic occupations. 3. The Kneževac settlement This site was largely undocumented in the scientific literature other than from verbal reports of Neolithic potsherds being found in fields by local villagers (Bogdanović, 1983). No subsequent archaeological survey or test excavations were undertaken in the area to try and locate the site. The regional pedestrian survey in 2017 identified a spatial cluster of Starčevo type pottery near the northernmost part of the historical Kneževac village. The site is situated along a gentle slope that represents the first outcrops of the foothills of the Rudnik Mountain. There is one active freshwater spring within the site, another in the immediate vicinity, and two small creeks running on both sides. The soil on the site is vertisol-smonitza, which is also found in the immediate vicinity of the site, and the adjacent creek areas. The surrounding higher flatlands are comprised of the cambisol gajnjača soil type, which has a relatively low agricultural production yield. Even today, higher flatland crops are more dispersed than in the lower parts of the valley where the soils are more productive. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
新石器时代生活方式的发展代表了当地生态环境下社会组织和人与环境关系的根本转变。在更广泛的欧洲史前背景下,对巴尔干半岛这一过程的理解仍然是有趣和具有挑战性的。巴尔干地区新石器时代进程的证据始于公元前七千年左右,在东南部的重要遗址,如Nea Nikomedia和Sesklo,那里的矩形房屋结构和其他“新石器时代的组合”元素与黎凡特非常相似。然而,巴尔干半岛的北部地区呈现出不同的情况,那里有小型的平坦遗址,后来的入侵使得早期新石器时代的模式难以辨别。本文报告了最近在塞尔维亚中部(Šumadija地区,Gruža河谷)进行的实地研究,通过系统的行人调查,人工制品空间分析和近地表考古地球物理,在新确定的Kneževac遗址发现了与star<e:1> evo文化相关的新石器时代早期占领。本研究的结果在该地区其他新石器时代早期定居证据的背景下进行了讨论,以及它们对了解塞尔维亚中部早期农业人口的影响。Miroslav ko<e:1> iki, Bryan Hanks, Marija kali<e:1> anin krstiki, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec:通过联合行人调查和考古地球物理勘探在塞尔维亚Šumadija地区识别早期新石器时代的定居点10发现了早期star<e:1> evo“坑室”特征(McPherron and srevivic, 1988)。不幸的是,由于第一阶段早期沉积物的严重风化作用,以及随后的Divostin II阶段的侵入性占领,第一阶段并没有提供关于早期star<s:1> evo文化聚落组织的更多信息。20世纪80年代,在位于莫拉瓦河谷的布拉戈廷遗址的发掘中,产生了关于巴尔干中部新石器时代早期的重要新信息(stankoviki and lekoviki, 1993)。20世纪80年代,在Paljevine和Grobnice遗址完成了大规模的挖掘,这些遗址现在位于Gruža湖的淹没区。不幸的是,这些遗址(450平方米的挖掘面积)没有公布,也没有相关的实地报告。莫拉瓦河谷最近的考古发掘是在德雷诺瓦克的大型项目;然而,这是一个多时期的遗址,在遗址的早期阶段/职业上覆盖着非常重要的vin<e:1>地层(periki, 2016)。除了这些遗址外,其他报道的新石器时代早期遗址被后来的vin<e:1>时期占领,只受到非常有限的挖掘。这种情况挑战了对塞尔维亚中部新石器时代早期遗址的空间组织的任何解释,以及重建重要的star<s:1>进化到后来的vin<e:1>过渡的任何尝试。目前,关于塞尔维亚star<e:1> evo社区组织的最佳信息来源之一是Jaričište I遗址的打捞挖掘(mariki, 2013)。通过挖掘,该遗址的一大片区域暴露出来,揭示了同心聚集的地下坑屋及其建造、使用和维护的细节(mariki, 2013)。Jaričište I的遗址表明,star<e:1> evo坑屋是耐用的建筑,支持了这些固定的、永久的职业而不是短暂的营地的解释。因此,这些早期遗址代表了研究巴尔干地区新兴新石器时代趋势的重要早期国内遗址。然而,需要更多的研究来更好地了解这些早期的职业,社区组织和区域定居模式,以及对当地资源的利用。值得注意的是,横跨巴尔干中部的Starčevo-Körös-Criș定居点之间确实有许多相似之处,包括它们的空间组织。重要的实地研究,包括考古地球物理、行人调查和地层挖掘,已经在匈牙利和罗马尼亚的几个早期新石器时代遗址完成,并为解释塞尔维亚中部的早期定居地点提供了重要的比较数据基础(Bánffy, 2000;Green and Lawson, 2018;Banffy, 2013)。然而,也存在着强烈的区域特征和模式,很难将塞尔维亚中部遗址与帕诺尼亚盆地同时期的遗址进行直接比较,因为它们距离400多公里,处于完全不同的地貌带。因此,需要更多的研究来检查塞尔维亚的这种定居模式,并解决有关这些早期新石器时代遗址的许多悬而未决的问题。 为此,2016年,匹兹堡大学和塞尔维亚克拉古耶瓦茨文化古迹保护研究所启动了一项新的合作计划,重点是在塞尔维亚中部Šumadija地区进行系统的行人调查,并结合多方法考古地球物理调查。迄今为止,通过系统的实地行走(ko<e:1> iki, 2019,博士论文研究),已经调查了102.47平方公里的总面积,并通过Šumadija区域地理空间考古项目(SRGAP),通过多方法地球物理调查调查了5个新石器时代聚落(共52公顷)。在接下来的章节中,我们将讨论在Kneževac地点的研究,该地点是由M. ko<e:1>伊奇于2017年通过行人调查、地面收集和空间分析确定的。随后,SRGAP于2018年在该遗址进行了多仪器地球物理研究,以进一步表征该遗址的考古潜力。2020年将在Kneževac进行进一步的调查和实地调查。2. 区域尺度行人调查所采用的方法遵循了与北美田野考古传统相关的方法,这些方法长期以来一直受到对世界各地不同地点的定居主义和动植物驯化过程的比较关注的影响。重建聚落模式,作为解释人口过程、集水区和聚落等级的一种方式,一直是这类研究的共同元素(Carneiro, 1970;厄尔,1997)。Šumadija地区的历史财产继承做法导致了地块的分裂,导致几乎没有大片开放的土地可供调查。区域尺度行人调查中使用的现场方法借鉴了以前发表的方法(MacNeish等,1975;Hirth, 1980;Feinman和Nicholas, 1990),以及最近对地表人工制品密度较高的采样地点的统计方法(drerennan和Peterson, 2011)。调查小组维持每天大约50公顷覆盖范围的客观目标,但这取决于所遇到的地点和相关地面人工制品的密度。大部分调查区域由开放的耕地组成,田野行走是在一个日历年和多个季节进行的。这确保了在最近耕作或整个冬季休耕的田地中,人工制品的表面可视性非常好。调查小组由五名成员组成,他们系统地走在一起,间隔20米。手持式GPS装置被用来记录每个样带的开始和结束。主要收集单位为1公顷的细胞,进一步划分为20×20 m的亚细胞收集单位。通过联合行人调查和考古地球物理勘探11样本确定塞尔维亚Šumadija地区的早期新石器时代定居点,从而限制了需要收集用于空间分析的人工制品的总数(Drennan和Peterson, 2011)。在区域调查期间,总共收集了27,754件文物,其中包括两个大型新石器时代定居点(Grivac和Kusovac,每个约35公顷),其中有新石器时代早期到晚期的证据(star<e:1> evo和vin<e:1> a),第三个遗址Kneževac(面积约6公顷),仅显示了新石器时代早期的占领(star<e:1> evo)(图1)。我们在Kneževac上详细介绍了研究结果,因为这是唯一一个没有后来侵入性新石器时代职业的早期新石器时代遗址。3.Kneževac定居点除了当地村民在田野中发现新石器时代陶器碎片的口头报告外,该遗址在科学文献中基本上没有记载(bogdanovizi, 1983)。随后没有在该地区进行考古调查或试验挖掘,试图确定遗址的位置。2017年的区域行人调查发现,在历史悠久的Kneževac村庄最北端附近,有一个star<s:1> evo型陶器的空间集群。该基地位于一个平缓的斜坡上,代表了Rudnik山山麓的第一次露头。场地内有一个活跃的淡水泉,另一个在附近,两侧有两条小溪。场地上的土壤是垂直土壤,在场地附近和邻近的小溪地区也发现了这种土壤。周围的高平地由cambisol gajnja<e:1>组成,这是一种土壤类型,农业生产产量相对较低。 即使在今天,地势较高的平原作物也比土壤更肥沃的山谷低洼地区更加分散。共有436个人工制品
Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection
The development of Neolithic lifeways represented fundamental shifts in social organization and human-environment relationships within local ecological settings. An understanding of this process in the Balkans peninsula has remained intriguing and challenging in the broader context of European prehistory. Evidence for Neolithization processes in the Balkans begins around the seventh millennium BC in the south-east at important tell sites such as Nea Nikomedia and Sesklo where rectangular house structures and other elements of the “Neolithic package” strongly resemble those of the Levant. The northern zone of the Balkans peninsula, however, presents a different situation, with small flat sites with intrusive later occupation making patterns of early Neolithization difficult to discern. This paper reports recent field research in Central Serbia (Šumadija region, Gruža River valley) where Early Neolithic occupation related to the Starčevo culture has been found at the newly identified site of Kneževac through systematic pedestrian survey, artifact spatial analysis, and near surface archaeological geophysics. The results of this research are discussed in the context of other Early Neolithic settlement evidence in the region, along with their implications for understanding early agricultural populations in Central Serbia. IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 10 found exactly above earlier Starčevo “pit-house” features (McPherron and Srejović, 1988). Unfortunately, due to heavy weathering of the early Phase I deposits, and subsequent intrusive occupation of the Divostin II phase, Phase I does not provide much additional information on the organization of early Starčevo culture settlements. Important new information about the Early Neolithic in the Central Balkans was generated in the 1980s by excavations at the site of Blagotin, situated in the Morava River valley (Stanković and Leković, 1993). There were large scale excavations completed in the 1980s at the sites of Paljevine and Grobnice, which are now located in the submerged zone of the Gruža Lake. Unfortunately, these sites (450 square meters of excavated area) were not published and the associated field reports are not available. The most recent archaeological excavation in the Morava River valley is the large-scale project at Drenovac; however, this is a multiperiod site with a very significant Vinča stratigraphic layer overlying the earlier phases/occupations at the site (Perić, 2016). Apart from these sites, other reported Early Neolithic sites are covered by later Vinča phase occupation and have only been subject to very limited excavation. This situation challenges any interpretation of the spatial organization of Early Neolithic sites in central Serbia and any attempts to reconstruct the important Starčevo to the later Vinča transition. Currently, one of the best sources of information on the organization of Starčevo communities in Serbia is the salvage excavation at the site of Jaričište I (Marić, 2013). A large expanse of this site was exposed through excavation, revealing concentrically grouped subterranean pit-houses and details of their construction, use, and maintenance (Marić, 2013). The site of Jaričište I indicates that Starčevo pit-houses were durable constructions, supporting interpretations that these were fixed, permanent occupations rather than ephemeral camp sites in the landscape. These early sites, therefore, represent important early domestic loci for examining emergent Neolithization trends in the Balkans. However, much more research is needed to better understand these early occupations, the community organization and regional settlement patterning, and use of local resources. It is important to note that there are indeed many similarities among Starčevo-Körös-Criș settlements across the central Balkans, including their spatial organization. Important field research, including archaeological geophysics, pedestrian survey, and stratigraphic excavation, has been completed at several Early Neolithic sites in Hungary and Romania and provide an important foundation of comparative data for interpreting early settlement sites in central Serbia (Bánffy, 2000; Green and Lawson, 2018; Bánffy, 2013). However, there also exist strong regional characteristics and patterns and it is difficult to make direct comparisons of central Serbian sites to contemporaneous sites in the Panonian Basin, which are over 400 kilometres away and in a completely different geomorphological zone. More research, therefore, is needed to examine such settlement patterning in Serbia and to address the many open questions regarding these Early Neolithic sites. In response to this, in 2016, the University of Pittsburgh and the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Monuments in Kragujevac, Serbia, initiated a new program of cooperation focusing on systematic pedestrian survey coupled with multi-method archaeological geophysical surveys in the Šumadija region of central Serbia. To date, a total area of 102.47 km2 has been surveyed through systematic field walking (Kočić, 2019, doctoral dissertation research) and five Neolithic settlements have been investigated with multi-method geophysical surveys (total of 52 ha) through the Šumadija Regional Geospatial Archaeology Project (SRGAP). In the following sections, we discuss research at the site of Kneževac, which was identified through pedestrian survey and surface collection and spatial analysis by M. Kočić in 2017. Subsequent multiinstrument geophysics was conducted at the site by SRGAP in 2018 to further characterize the archaeological potential of the site. Further investigation and ground truthing will be conducted at Kneževac in 2020. 2. Pedestrian survey methods The methods employed for the regional scale pedestrian survey followed those associated with North American field archaeology traditions, which have been long influenced by a comparative focus on the emergence of sedentism and animal and plant domestication processes in different locations around the world. Reconstruction of settlement patterning as a way of interpreting demographic processes, catchment zones, and settlement hierarchies has been a common element in such studies (Carneiro, 1970; Earle, 1997). Historical property inheritance practices within the Šumadija region have led to the splitting of land parcels, resulting in virtually no large, open tracts of land to survey. The field methods utilized in the regional scale pedestrian survey drew on previously published methods (MacNeish et al., 1975; Hirth, 1980; Feinman and Nicholas, 1990) and more recent statistical approaches to sampling sites with dense concentrations of surface artifacts (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). The survey team maintained an objective target of approximately 50 ha of coverage per day but this varied depending on the sites encountered and density of associated surface artifacts. Most of the survey zone was made up of open tilled fields and field walking was done over the course of a calendar year and multiple seasons. This ensured that the surface visibility of artifacts was excellent in fields that had been recently tilled or left fallow through the winter. The survey team was comprised of a line of five members who walked together systematically while spaced 20 m apart. Handheld GPS units were utilized to record the beginning and end of each transect. The primary collection units were 1-hectare cells, which were further divided into sub-cell collection units of 20×20 m. These units were sampled using a 1.81 m radius “dog-leash” collection circle, which provided a 10 m2 IANSA 2020 ● XI/1 ● 9–19 Miroslav Kočić, Bryan Hanks, Marija Kaličanin Krstić, Marc Bermann, Petra Basar, Michael Mlyniec: Identifying Early Neolithic Settlements in the Šumadija Region of Serbia Through Combined Pedestrian Survey and Archaeological Geophysical Prospection 11 sample, thereby limiting the total number of artifacts that needed to be collected for spatial analysis (Drennan and Peterson, 2011). In total, 27,754 artifacts were collected during the regional survey and this included full coverage of two large Neolithic settlements (Grivac and Kusovac, each approximately 35 ha) with evidence of Early to Late Neolithic occupation (Starčevo and Vinča) and a third site, Kneževac (approximately 6 ha in size), which displayed only Early Neolithic occupation (Starčevo) (Figure 1). In the following sections, we detail the results of research at Kneževac as this was the only Early Neolithic site identified with no later intrusive Neolithic occupations. 3. The Kneževac settlement This site was largely undocumented in the scientific literature other than from verbal reports of Neolithic potsherds being found in fields by local villagers (Bogdanović, 1983). No subsequent archaeological survey or test excavations were undertaken in the area to try and locate the site. The regional pedestrian survey in 2017 identified a spatial cluster of Starčevo type pottery near the northernmost part of the historical Kneževac village. The site is situated along a gentle slope that represents the first outcrops of the foothills of the Rudnik Mountain. There is one active freshwater spring within the site, another in the immediate vicinity, and two small creeks running on both sides. The soil on the site is vertisol-smonitza, which is also found in the immediate vicinity of the site, and the adjacent creek areas. The surrounding higher flatlands are comprised of the cambisol gajnjača soil type, which has a relatively low agricultural production yield. Even today, higher flatland crops are more dispersed than in the lower parts of the valley where the soils are more productive. A total of 436 artifa