학술논문

Aşıklı Höyük: The Generative Evolution of a Central Anatolian PPN Settlement in Regional Context.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Archaeological Research. Dec2022, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p497-543. 47p.
Subject
*COMMUNITIES
*SEDENTARY lifestyles
*LIVESTOCK productivity
*NEOLITHIC Period
*RATE of return on stocks
Language
ISSN
1059-0161
Abstract
The first Neolithic settlements in Southwest Asia began with a dual commitment to plant cultivation and a sedentary lifestyle. The benefits that foragers-turned-farmers gained from this commitment came with some inescapable constraints, setting new evolutionary pathways for human social and economic activities. We explore the developmental process at the early Pre-Pottery Neolithic site of Aşıklı Höyük in central Anatolia (Turkey), specifically the relationship between internal dynamics and external influences in early village formation. Feedback mechanisms inherent to the community were responsible for many of the unique developments there, including domestication of a variant of free-threshing wheat and the early evolution of caprine management, which gave rise to domesticated stock. Gradual change was the rule at Aşıklı, yet the cumulative transformations in architecture, settlement layout, and caprine management were great. The many strands of evidence reveal a largely local (endemic) evolution of an early Pre-Pottery Neolithic community. However, burgeoning inequalities stemming from production surplus such as livestock likely stimulated greater regional interaction toward the end of the sequence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]