This paper presents the preliminary results of two recent excavations held at the Early Neolithic site of Portonovo - Fosso Fontanaccia on the Conero promontory in the Marche. Here 16 domed ovens were found cut into the hillslope, one of which was intact. Two of the ovens contain three burials, while the remains of a cremated female were found in an open area, carefully collected in a container of organic material which was not preserved. Oven batteries dug into the ground are known in many sites of Central Europe, from France to Slovakia, from the Early Neolithic onwards. On the other hand, in Italy the documentation for domed ovens is restricted to a few, poorly preserved specimens. This article focuses on the main features of the structures and burials, while pottery and lithics are currently under study. Micromorphological, archaeozoological and palaeobotanical analyses are in progress. The appendices contain the anthropological study of human remains, the bone collagen stable isotope analysis, the preliminary results of the anthracological study and analysis of the temperatures reached in the ovens. Sampling for an archeomagnetical analysis of the three structures discovered in 2012 and not yet excavated will be carried out on the next campaign.
Cooking, working and burying in Ancient Neolithic: the fire structures of Portonovo (Marche, Italy) / CONATI BARBARO, Cecilia. - In: ORIGINI. - ISSN 0474-6805. - 35:(2013), pp. 31-51.
Cooking, working and burying in Ancient Neolithic: the fire structures of Portonovo (Marche, Italy)
CONATI BARBARO, Cecilia
2013
Abstract
This paper presents the preliminary results of two recent excavations held at the Early Neolithic site of Portonovo - Fosso Fontanaccia on the Conero promontory in the Marche. Here 16 domed ovens were found cut into the hillslope, one of which was intact. Two of the ovens contain three burials, while the remains of a cremated female were found in an open area, carefully collected in a container of organic material which was not preserved. Oven batteries dug into the ground are known in many sites of Central Europe, from France to Slovakia, from the Early Neolithic onwards. On the other hand, in Italy the documentation for domed ovens is restricted to a few, poorly preserved specimens. This article focuses on the main features of the structures and burials, while pottery and lithics are currently under study. Micromorphological, archaeozoological and palaeobotanical analyses are in progress. The appendices contain the anthropological study of human remains, the bone collagen stable isotope analysis, the preliminary results of the anthracological study and analysis of the temperatures reached in the ovens. Sampling for an archeomagnetical analysis of the three structures discovered in 2012 and not yet excavated will be carried out on the next campaign.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.