2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jasrep.2018.10.021
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Evidences of branching and blending phenomena in the pottery decoration during the dispersal of the Early Neolithic across Western Europe

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Focusing on the Western Mediterranean, recent studies addressing decoration techniques in the Neolithic pottery record have been used to investigate patterns and mechanisms of the agricultural spread [ 16 , 17 ]. The promising results achieved so far reinforce the scattered and discontinuous character of the Neolithic expansion, while also providing evidence of some kind of branching phenomena [ 18 ]. In this paper, and through a computational analysis of stylistic diversity, we use for the first time geometric microliths to explore cultural variability at the times of the pioneer arrival of the Neolithic at the Mediterranean coast of Iberia around the middle of the VIII millennium cal BP.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…Focusing on the Western Mediterranean, recent studies addressing decoration techniques in the Neolithic pottery record have been used to investigate patterns and mechanisms of the agricultural spread [ 16 , 17 ]. The promising results achieved so far reinforce the scattered and discontinuous character of the Neolithic expansion, while also providing evidence of some kind of branching phenomena [ 18 ]. In this paper, and through a computational analysis of stylistic diversity, we use for the first time geometric microliths to explore cultural variability at the times of the pioneer arrival of the Neolithic at the Mediterranean coast of Iberia around the middle of the VIII millennium cal BP.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Obviously, the nature and size of the sample analysed must be improved and increased, while it is also necessary to test the method including other cultural items. In fact, some works designed to explore cultural diversity in a diachronic view, and focussing on pottery and ornament have revealed different mechanisms of cultural transmission [ 17 , 18 , 53 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Los estudios de las decoraciones cerámicas han sido fundamentales para la secuencia cronológica de la Prehistoria reciente, particularmente la neolítica. Los primeros horizontes culturales del Neolítico europeo relacionados con el proceso de expansión/adopción del modo de vida campesino, así como los posteriores estilos regionales, asociados a los procesos interacción y/o de consolidación (Guilaine, 2001;Pardo-Gordó, García-Rivero y Bernabeu, 2019), cuentan con una amplia y bien conocida secuencia.…”
Section: Introductionunclassified
“…Regarding the defining characteristics of the Early Neolithic, a number of complications stem from considering south-western Iberia as a geographical cul-de-sac, to which successive waves of incoming groups may have arrived via different mechanisms and routes, and from different places. The current models of diffusion imply different pathways, points of passage, and rhythms of displacement (Fort, 2015;Isern et al, 2017;Pardo et al, 2019), and the question of movement by land or sea has a direct bearing on the weight ascribed to the Mediterranean cultural influence in the Atlantic regions (Zilhão, 1993(Zilhão, , 2003. The Mediterranean Early Neolithic has been linked in particular to the presence of Cardial impressed pottery, and occasionally to an earlier ceramic horizon related to the Ligurian-Provençal Impressa group (Bernabeu et al, 2009;Manen et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%