The identification of mobility patterns in prehistoric communities is crucial for the understanding of their social and economic strategies. Though factors such as economics, environment, and cultural choices are strictly related to mobility, it has been demonstrated how anticipated mobility is pivotal in generating different aspects of site structure and spatial organization. Considering the stone structures uncovered at Takarkori rock shelter (southwestern Libya, central Sahara), we performed morphometrical and spatial analysis to provide appropriate indicators of mobility patterns, site structure, and activity areas among hunter-gatherers and pastoral groups that inhabited the shelter during the Early and Middle Holocene. We recognized year-round semisedentary patterns and shorter seasonal occupations, based on the number, size, typology, and topography of stone structures. The paper discusses how, through the analysis of stone structures, it is possible to recognize mobility patterns in the archaeological record.
Site organization and mobility strategies. The Early and Middle Holocene stone structures from Takarkori Rock Shelter (Southwestern Libya) / Scancarello, Oliver; Gallinaro, Marina; DI LERNIA, Savino. - In: JOURNAL OF FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY. - ISSN 0093-4690. - 47:2(2022), pp. 1-19. [10.1080/00934690.2021.2009214]
Site organization and mobility strategies. The Early and Middle Holocene stone structures from Takarkori Rock Shelter (Southwestern Libya)
Scancarello Olivier
;Gallinaro Marina;Di Lernia SavinoUltimo
2022
Abstract
The identification of mobility patterns in prehistoric communities is crucial for the understanding of their social and economic strategies. Though factors such as economics, environment, and cultural choices are strictly related to mobility, it has been demonstrated how anticipated mobility is pivotal in generating different aspects of site structure and spatial organization. Considering the stone structures uncovered at Takarkori rock shelter (southwestern Libya, central Sahara), we performed morphometrical and spatial analysis to provide appropriate indicators of mobility patterns, site structure, and activity areas among hunter-gatherers and pastoral groups that inhabited the shelter during the Early and Middle Holocene. We recognized year-round semisedentary patterns and shorter seasonal occupations, based on the number, size, typology, and topography of stone structures. The paper discusses how, through the analysis of stone structures, it is possible to recognize mobility patterns in the archaeological record.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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