Neolithic Pottery Spread (6700 to 3600 BCE)
(Dec. 30, 2022) Neolithisation is the term for the cultural transition of Europe brought about by migrations of Akkadian speaking Neolithic farmers into the broad river valleys. This migration had two branches with the main one going along the coastlines from Crete and a lessor one going up the Danube river. The farmers who reached Britain would have belonged to the coastal tradition.
Early Neolithic Farmer Pottery Types
Neolithic Dairy Production
Image from Spiteri (2012)
from Wikipedia Commons via Alvarez and all (2009) at: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spatial_frequency_distribution_of_different_sub-lineages_of_mtDNA_haplogroup_H.png
Neolithic Farmer Genetics
The main genetic marker for the Neolithic farmers is the female side mitochondrial DNA haplogroup H. A mitochondria is an organelle in the cell body which generates energy for the cell. Thus it only exists in the egg and from there it is transmitted to future offspring only by the mother.
Haplogroup H had frequency of 19% among Neolithic Early European Farmers and is virtually absent among Mesolithic European hunter gatherers. (Brotherton and all 2013)
Haplogroup H was also present in the Cucuteni–Trypillia culture. Nikitin and all (2017)
The clade has been observed among ancient Egyptian mummies excavated at the Abusir el-Meleq archaeological site in Middle Egypt, which date from the pre-Ptolemaic/late New Kingdom and Ptolemaic periods. Schuenemann and all (2017)
Additionally, haplogroup H has been found among specimens at the mainland cemetery in Kulubnarti, Sudan, which date from the Early Christian period (AD 550–800). Sirak (2016)
References
Álvarez-Iglesias V, Mosquera-Miguel A, Cerezo M, Quintáns B, Zarrabeitia MT, Cuscó I, et al. (2009) New Population and Phylogenetic Features of the Internal Variation within Mitochondrial DNA Macro-Haplogroup R0. PLoS ONE 4(4): e5112. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0005112 http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0005112Brotherton P, Haak W, Templeton J, Brandt G, Soubrier J, Jane Adler C, et al. (2013). "Neolithic mitochondrial haplogroup H genomes and the genetic origins of Europeans". Nature Communications. 4: 1764. Bibcode:2013NatCo...4.1764.. doi:10.1038/ncomms2656. PMC 3978205. PMID 23612305.
Nikitin AG, Potekhina I, Rohland N, Mallick S, Reich D, Lillie M (2017). "Mitochondrial DNA analysis of eneolithic trypillians from Ukraine reveals neolithic farming genetic roots". PLOS ONE. 12 (2): e0172952. Bibcode:2017PLoSO..1272952N. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0172952. PMC 5325568. PMID 28235025.
Schuenemann VJ, Peltzer A, Welte B, van Pelt WP, Molak M, Wang CC, et al. (May 2017). "Ancient Egyptian mummy genomes suggest an increase of Sub-Saharan African ancestry in post-Roman periods". Nature Communications. 8: 15694. Bibcode:2017NatCo...815694S. doi:10.1038/ncomms15694. PMC 5459999. PMID 28556824.
Sirak K, Frenandes D, Novak M, Van Gerven D, Pinhasi R (2016). "Abstract Book of the IUAES Inter-Congress 2016 – A community divided? Revealing the community genome(s) of Medieval Kulubnarti using next- generation sequencing". Abstract Book of the Iuaes Inter-Congress 2016. IUAES: 115.
Wikipedia (2022) at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haplogroup_H_(mtDNA)
Earliest Neolithic Farmer Pottery from Eastern Europe
Early Northern Vinca Culture Pottery Near Modern Hungary (6000 BCE)
János Jakucs and all (September 2016) Between the Vinča and Linearbandkeramik Worlds: The Diversity of Practices and Identities in the 54th–53rd Centuries cal BC in Southwest Hungary and Beyond
Online at: DOI: 10.1007/s10963-016-9096-x
Dimini Pottery from Peloponnese and Crete (6700 BCE)
Photo taken in National Museum of Archaeology, Athens, Greece and from Wikimedia at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ancient_Greece_Neolithic_Pottery_%26_Stone_Artifacts.jpg
Neolithic Coastal Pottery (short repeating impressions)
Impressed (Cardium) Pottery from Apulia Italy (6000-5500 BCE)
Photo from Spiteri (2012). Section A shows: Impressed decorative motifs from Balsignano (Apulia, Italy) (Muntoni, 2002a); B: Rocker decoration, created by the continuous zig-zag motion of a shell along a set trajectory, from Balsignano (Apulia) (Muntoni, 2002a)
Impressed Pottery from Calabria Italy (6000-5500 BCE)
Impressed Pottery from Iberia (5600 BCE)
Coastal Pottery in France (5250-4900 BCE)
Image from: Kirschneck, Erich (November 2021) The Phenomena La Hoguette and Limburg – Technological Aspects. Open Archeology volume 7 issue 1. Online at: https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0195
Coastal Pottery in France (5250-4900 BCE)
Image from: Kirschneck, Erich (November 2021) The Phenomena La Hoguette and Limburg – Technological Aspects. Open Archeology volume 7 issue 1. Online at: https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0195
Neolithic Danubian Pottery (impressed geometric lines)
Linear Pottery Style (5500–4500 BCE)
Two variants of the early Linear Pottery culture are recognized:
- The Early or Western Linear Pottery Culture developed on the middle Danube, including western Hungary, and was carried down the Rhine, Elbe, Oder and Vistula.
- The Eastern Linear Pottery Culture flourished in eastern Hungary.
Photo from: https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/2150725
References
Cynthianne Debono Spiteri (2012) Pottery use at the transition to agriculture in the western Mediterranean. Evidence from biomolecular and isotopic characterization of organic residues in Impressed/Cardial Ware vessels. Online at: https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/77048320/CDS_PhD_2012-libre.pdf?1640181235=&response-content-disposition=inline%3B+filename%3DPottery_use_at_the_transition_to_agricul.pdf&Expires=1660575423&Signature=gbmyCei0uxGzGuLtZUKc~WXirAiM-lgQJGUJvIUDBglJyTvRcSvAzZxl56A2LItZeCzhW~NNJjGlanyInwgVj14Q4Y6buODs8aHpVgZNnYqqVSlfO4LGx-7FRfyhL4LrtGU6a3iXXaI6Fgw-FnpJzNDobt6qAyyLAaTNJrihn6Tum6QefKkx1KQTmampCmNlFpnbgRPPuP58moYK37-hh8PrRLN75iwd18UtaAAU~zMVLbYJmB-dx4y0QgdV5kc5RhLY1UVm9P7fsGPaV~ylhDmMFBCAH0g1qOydPbjYNK61dVOy6mfEnzO5CKzUIdbzhvAowzSnipQDHyNXwDGfPg__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA
Britain and North Sea Pottery
Swifterbant Pottery Tradition (5000-3400 BC) in the Netherlands
Raemaekers, Daan and de Roever, J.P. (2010) The Swifterbant pottery tradition (5000-3400 BC), Matters of Fact and Matters of Interest in Pots, Farmers and Foragers edited by B. Vanmontfort, L. Louwe Kooijmans, L. Amkreutz, L. Verhart. Leiden University Press. Online at: https://www.academia.edu/1883252/2010_The_Swifterbant_pottery_tradition_5000_3400_BC_matters_of_fact_and_matters_of_interest
Windmill Hill Pot Near Stonehenge (4000 BCE)
Pot on display at the Alexander Keiller Museum, Avebury, Great Britain. Image from: https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/pot-from-windmill-hill-causewayed-enclosure-avebury/hAFVqAjEzgMIbA
Pottery from Lockerbie Scotland Settlement - 1 (3700-3900 BCE)
Pottery from Lockerbie Scotland Settlement - 2 (3700-3900 BCE)
Skarpsalling Pot from Northern Denmark (3200 BC)
This is the last and most developed pottery style from the Neolithic farmers before the Indo-European invasion.
Now at the Danish National Museum at Kobenhaven (Nationalmuseet i København). Online at: https://en.natmus.dk/historical-knowledge/denmark/prehistoric-period-until-1050-ad/the-neolithic-period/the-skarpsalling-pot/