Neolithic wetland sites in the Swiss Plateau provide an extraordinary database for the study of mobilities, entanglements and transformations in material culture. Based on dendrochronologically dated settlements between 3900 and 3500 BC, two regional pottery styles and their local variations are well known, Pfyn and Cortaillod. The vessels share the same habitus and were made of local raw materials. However, some vessels specific to other pottery styles are also present in the sites. By focusing on itineraries of vessels and shifts in pottery knowledge, their appropriation in different contexts and the resulting material entanglements, we want to approach the multiple regimes of mobility: At Lake Constance - known for Pfyn pottery - specif...
This edited volume deals with the mobility of humans, materials and things. Pottery studies of ancie...
Excavations of Neolithic (4000 – 3500 BC) and Late Bronze Age (1200 – 800 BC) wetland sites on the n...
In Pots, Farmers and Foragers, the contributing 24 European scholars show a new synthesis of the com...
Pottery is one of the most common and stylistically differentiated sources in prehistoric archaeolog...
Pottery is one of the most commonly used sources in prehistoric archaeology to construct notions of ...
Neolithic wetland sites in the Northern Alpine Foreland dating to the 4th M BCE provide an extraordi...
Life in the 21st century seems to be particularly shaped by mobility, from daily commuter movements ...
The study of pottery and their distribution patterns constitutes one of the basic archaeological tas...
For many past and present societies, pottery forms an integral part of material culture and everyday...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is twofold: first, we strive to find routes of flint sup...
This research is focused on the transition from a hunter-gatherer way of life (‘Mesolithic’) to an a...
The wetland site of Burgäschisee-Nord is located on the northern shore of the small lake Burgäschi ...
In central Switzerland, the earliest wetland settlements with definitely attested finds and feature...
In recent decades numerous Neolithic lakeside and wetland settlements have been investigated in Swit...
The MOVE-project at the University of Bern focuses on settlement interruptions, cultural continuity,...
This edited volume deals with the mobility of humans, materials and things. Pottery studies of ancie...
Excavations of Neolithic (4000 – 3500 BC) and Late Bronze Age (1200 – 800 BC) wetland sites on the n...
In Pots, Farmers and Foragers, the contributing 24 European scholars show a new synthesis of the com...
Pottery is one of the most common and stylistically differentiated sources in prehistoric archaeolog...
Pottery is one of the most commonly used sources in prehistoric archaeology to construct notions of ...
Neolithic wetland sites in the Northern Alpine Foreland dating to the 4th M BCE provide an extraordi...
Life in the 21st century seems to be particularly shaped by mobility, from daily commuter movements ...
The study of pottery and their distribution patterns constitutes one of the basic archaeological tas...
For many past and present societies, pottery forms an integral part of material culture and everyday...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is twofold: first, we strive to find routes of flint sup...
This research is focused on the transition from a hunter-gatherer way of life (‘Mesolithic’) to an a...
The wetland site of Burgäschisee-Nord is located on the northern shore of the small lake Burgäschi ...
In central Switzerland, the earliest wetland settlements with definitely attested finds and feature...
In recent decades numerous Neolithic lakeside and wetland settlements have been investigated in Swit...
The MOVE-project at the University of Bern focuses on settlement interruptions, cultural continuity,...
This edited volume deals with the mobility of humans, materials and things. Pottery studies of ancie...
Excavations of Neolithic (4000 – 3500 BC) and Late Bronze Age (1200 – 800 BC) wetland sites on the n...
In Pots, Farmers and Foragers, the contributing 24 European scholars show a new synthesis of the com...