학술논문

Neolithic pastoralism in marginal environments during the Holocene Humid Period, northern Saudi Arabia
Document Type
Report
Source
Antiquity. October 2018, Vol. 92 Issue 365, p1180, 15 p.
Subject
Saudi Arabia
Language
English
ISSN
0003-598X
Abstract
The origins of agriculture in South-west Asia is a topic of continued archaeological debate. Of particular interest is how agricultural populations and practices spread inter-regionally. Was the Arabian Neolithic, for example, spread through the movement of pastoral groups, or did ideas perhaps develop independently? Here, the authors report on recent excavations at Alshabah, one of the first Neolithic sites discovered in Northern Arabia. The site's material culture, environmental context and chronology provide evidence suggesting that well-adapted, seasonally mobile, pastoralist groups played a key role in the Neolithisation of the Arabian Peninsula.Keywords: Arabian Peninsula, Neolithic, Holocene Wet Phase, grindstone tools, lithic technology
IntroductionThe transition from hunting and gathering to food-producing economies in Arabia took the form of a shift to mobile pastoralism. Domestic livestock appears to have been introduced in the seventh [...]