Early gender archaeology formulated two statements: men are visible, women are invisible, and men work in hard materials, women work in soft materials. We discuss these dichotomies in connection with nineteenth-century folklore and an excavated eighteenth-century cottage at a summer-farm. We conclude that much of the gendered order-of-work tasks broke down in pragmatic day-to-day life, especially by women crossing the gender border. However, social chaos was held at bay by ritual acts and magic objects.
The development of land forms in the Baltic region (see Figure 1) is complicated because of the isostatic land upheaval, the eustatic rise of the sea, and the succession of plants after the melting of the ice sheet. These factors must be considered when dealing with the Stone Age.
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