학술논문

British Neolithic Axehead Distributions and Their Implications.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Archaeological Method & Theory. Dec2020, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p836-859. 24p.
Subject
*CLUSTER analysis (Statistics)
*CONTENT analysis
*STONE
Language
ISSN
1072-5369
Abstract
Neolithic stone axeheads from Britain provide an unusually rich, well-provenanced set of evidence with which to consider patterns of prehistoric production and exchange. It is no surprise then that these objects have often been subject to spatial analysis in terms of the relationship between particular stone source areas and the distribution of axeheads made from those stones. At stake in such analysis are important interpretative issues to do with how we view the role of material value, supply, exchange, and demand in prehistoric societies. This paper returns to some of these well-established debates in the light of accumulating British Neolithic evidence and via the greater analytical power and flexibility afforded by recent computational methods. Our analyses make a case that spatial distributions of prehistoric axeheads cannot be explained merely as the result of uneven resource availability in the landscape, but instead reflect the active favouring of particular sources over known alternatives. Above and beyond these patterns, we also demonstrate that more populated parts of Early Neolithic Britain were an increased pull factor affecting the longer-range distribution of these objects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]