2017
DOI: 10.15388/archlit.2016.17.10685
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The First Farmers of Ukraine: an Archaeobotanical Investigation and AMS Dating of Wheat Grains from the Ratniv-2 Site

Abstract: This paper presents the results of archaeobotanical investigations performed during excavations of a Linear Pottery Culture (LBK) site in western Ukraine. The collection of cultivated plants and weeds found in the hearth of the LBK dwelling fits well with what was grown by LBK inhabitants elsewhere in Europe. The direct dating of cereal grains reveals the existence of early-stage LBK in Ukraine during a much earlier timeframe than previously thought. The new archaeobotanical results and their dates exclude oth… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
(19 reference statements)
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“…1 and data S1). Furthermore, archaeological finds show that LBK reached western Ukraine around 5300 BCE ( 52 ), and the Yamnaya complex (burial mounds) arrived in southeastern Europe around 3000 BCE and spread further as far as Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Hungary ( 53 ). This is in accordance with our genetic results as the two populations that proved to be plausible mixture sources for Fatyanovo, with the other source being either of the two Russian Yamnaya groups (Kalmykia or Samara), were Globular Amphora that includes individuals from Ukraine and Poland, and Trypillia that is composed of individuals from Ukraine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 and data S1). Furthermore, archaeological finds show that LBK reached western Ukraine around 5300 BCE ( 52 ), and the Yamnaya complex (burial mounds) arrived in southeastern Europe around 3000 BCE and spread further as far as Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Hungary ( 53 ). This is in accordance with our genetic results as the two populations that proved to be plausible mixture sources for Fatyanovo, with the other source being either of the two Russian Yamnaya groups (Kalmykia or Samara), were Globular Amphora that includes individuals from Ukraine and Poland, and Trypillia that is composed of individuals from Ukraine.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First farming communities connected to sites of the Volynskaya Neolithic culture and Linear Pottery Culture (LBK) established in the second part of the sixth millennium bc in the region (Kotova 2003 ). Earliest archaeological findings of LBK from southeastern Poland and northwestern Ukraine have been dated to 5300–4800 bc or 7,300–6,800 cal bp , indicating a rapid eastward spread of the LBK (Kotova 2003 ; Motuzaité Matuzevičiūtė and Telizhenko 2016 ; Czekaj-Zastawny et al 2020 ). In the northwestern Pontic region of the Ukrainian steppe, there is even earlier evidence for plant and animal domestication that has been attributed to the Bug-Dniestr culture, dated to the second half of the seventh millennium bc (ca.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, the glume base of glume wheat recovered from Chap II does not resemble that of typical glume wheat belonging to T. dicoccum found in Europe. Comparing the glume wheat internode bases from Chap II with those previously reported at the Linearbandkeramik site of Ratniv-2 site located in western Ukraine [51], the curve between glume and glume base at Chap II is straighter and ca 25% larger. Therefore, glume wheat at Chap II could represent local Central Asian morphotypes or subspecies, such as currently known from Chinese (see above).…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 52%