The introduction of Neolithic long-blades in Scandinavia is tangent with the establishment of the earliest farming communities, i.e. the Funnel Beaker culture, yet the production of long-blades continued throughout the Middle Neolithic period (3300–2350 cal BC). This paper aims to further enrich our understanding of the 3rd millennium BC in Scandinavia by focusing on the occurrence and significance of long-blades. A re-assessment of the archaeological record from Norway has identified eight sites with long-blades and five settlement sites where the presence of long-blades was indicated by blade fragments and formal tools. In Scandinavia and northern Germany 41 long-blade deposit sites, comprising a total of 529 blades, are known. Based on t...
This is an author-accepted version of an article originally published in Quaternary International, 2...
Made available with permission from Maney Publishing / Environmental Archaeology. www.maneypublishin...
This paper concerns the development and spread of flint daggers during the Neolithic and early metal...
This article deals with the history of late hunter-gatherer and early agricultural societies in Scan...
During south Scandinavian Late Bronze Age, c. 900-500 BC, a new tool was invented. It consisted of a...
International audienceFrom the fourth millennium bc onward, flint dagger and long-blade workshops de...
Although the Scandinavian Late Neolithic today is mainly defined by the introduction of bifacial fli...
The spread of a Neolithic mode of production in prehistory had a significant impact on subsequent ec...
Youn...
Abstract The Pitted Ware culture continues to attract attention from scholars. Being chrono...
Flint has a limited distribution in the Scandinavian area, natural sources being largely confined to...
Hunting-related rituals in the Early N...
In the 1990s, Christopher Prescott (1996) asked if there really was a Neolithic in Norway, by questi...
The tradition of hoarding axeheads is a well-known phenomenon within the first agrarian societies on...
This article seeks to clarify the reason for the flourishing of daggers during the first millennia o...
This is an author-accepted version of an article originally published in Quaternary International, 2...
Made available with permission from Maney Publishing / Environmental Archaeology. www.maneypublishin...
This paper concerns the development and spread of flint daggers during the Neolithic and early metal...
This article deals with the history of late hunter-gatherer and early agricultural societies in Scan...
During south Scandinavian Late Bronze Age, c. 900-500 BC, a new tool was invented. It consisted of a...
International audienceFrom the fourth millennium bc onward, flint dagger and long-blade workshops de...
Although the Scandinavian Late Neolithic today is mainly defined by the introduction of bifacial fli...
The spread of a Neolithic mode of production in prehistory had a significant impact on subsequent ec...
Youn...
Abstract The Pitted Ware culture continues to attract attention from scholars. Being chrono...
Flint has a limited distribution in the Scandinavian area, natural sources being largely confined to...
Hunting-related rituals in the Early N...
In the 1990s, Christopher Prescott (1996) asked if there really was a Neolithic in Norway, by questi...
The tradition of hoarding axeheads is a well-known phenomenon within the first agrarian societies on...
This article seeks to clarify the reason for the flourishing of daggers during the first millennia o...
This is an author-accepted version of an article originally published in Quaternary International, 2...
Made available with permission from Maney Publishing / Environmental Archaeology. www.maneypublishin...
This paper concerns the development and spread of flint daggers during the Neolithic and early metal...