Detecting and explaining technological innovation in prehistory

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ISBN: 9789088908255
Uitgever: Sidestone Press Academics
Verschijningsvorm: Hardcover
Auteur: Michela Spataro Martin Furholt
Druk: 1
Pagina's: 246
Taal: Engels
Verschijningsjaar: 2020
NUR: Archeologie

Technology refers to any set of standardised procedures for transforming raw materials into finished products. Innovation consists of any change in technology which has tangible and lasting effect on human practices, whether or not it provides utilitarian advantages. Prehistoric societies were never static, but the tempo of innovation occasionally increased to the point that we can refer to transformation taking place. Prehistorians must therefore identify factors promoting or hindering innovation.

This volume stems from an international workshop, organised by the Collaborative Research Centre 1266 'Scales of Transformation' at Kiel University in November 2017. The meeting challenged its participants to detect and explain technological change in the past and its role in transformation processes, using archaeological and ethnographic case studies. The papers draw mainly on examples from prehistoric Europe, but case-studies from Iran, the Indus Valley, and contemporary central America are also included. The authors adopt several perspectives, including cultural-historical, economic, environmental, demographic, functional, and agent-based approaches.

These case studies often rely on interdisciplinary research, whereby field archaeology, archaeometric analysis, experimental archaeology and ethnographic research are used together to observe and explain innovations and changes in the artisan's repertoire. The results demonstrate that interdisciplinary research is becoming essential to understanding transformation phenomena in prehistoric archaeology, superseding typo-chronological description and comparison.

This book is a scholarly publication aimed at academic researchers, particularly archaeologists and archaeological scientists working on ceramics, osseous and metal artefacts.

Contents

Preface

Michela Spataro

Introduction

Michela Spataro and Martin Furholt

Understanding the acceptance of innovative technical skills across time. Ethnographic and theoretical insights from Latin America

Dean E. Arnold

Innovation or inheritance? Assessing the social mechanisms underlying ceramic technological change in early Neolithic pottery assemblages in Central Europe

Louise Gomart, Alexandra Anders, Attila Kreiter, Tibor Marton, Krisztián Oross and Pál Raczky

Changes in the pottery production of the Linear Pottery Culture. Origins and directions of ideas

Anna Rauba-Bukowska and Agnieszka Czekaj-Zastawny

Innovations in ceramic technology in the context of culture change north of the Carpathians at the turn of the 6th and 5th millennia BC

Sławomir Kadrow

Neolithic pottery innovation in context. A model and case study from the Central and Western Balkans

Robert Hofmann

Technological innovation and social change. Early vs. late Neolithic pottery production of the Central Balkans

Jasna Vuković

Technological changes and innovations in the osseous industries in the early and late Neolithic in the Balkans

Selena Vitezović

Early wheel-made pottery in the Carpathian Basin

Szabolcs Czifra, Éva Kovács-Széles, Orsolya Viktorik, Péter Pánczél and Attila Kreiter

The onset of wheel-throwing in Middle Asia. A neolithic innovation?

Massimo Vidale

Technological Innovation. Defining terms and examining process through the talc-faience complex in the Indus Civilization

Heather Margaret-Louise Miller

Skill in high-temperature crafts. An artisanal perspective on fire

Katarina Botwid