- Dnieper-Donets culture
Dnieper-Donets culture, ca. 5th—4th millennium BC. A
neolithic (stone age ) culture in the area north of theBlack Sea /Sea of Azov between theDnieper andDonets River.Overview
It was a
hunter-gatherer culture that made the transition to early agriculture. The economic evidence from the earliest stages is almost exclusively from hunting and fishing.J.P.Mallory - In Search of the Indo-Europeans, 1989, p.190-191]Inhumation was in grave pits, with the deceased being covered inochre . Burial was sometimes individual, but larger groupings are more common, with burials being done sequentially in the same grave.There are parallels with the contemporaneous
Samara culture , and a larger horizon from the lower half of Dnieper to the mid-to-lower Volga has been drawn, particularly by the advocates of theKurgan hypothesis as expounded byMarija Gimbutas . Dmitry Telegin assigns them to a broad cultural region that spanned the Vistula in Poland southeast to the Dnieper. Mallory includes this area within the limits of the Proto-Indo-Europeans. The precise role of this culture and its language to the derivation of the Pontic-Caspian cultures such asSredny Stog andYamna culture , is open to debate, though the display of recurrent traits points either to long-standing mutual contacts or underlying genetic relations. [J.P.Mallory - In Search of the Indo-Europeans, 1989, p.197]The physical remains recovered from graves have been described as typically
Europoid . They are predominantly characterized as late Cro-Magnons with more massive and robust features than the gracile Mediterranean peoples of the Balkan Neolithic.Pottery
The early use of typical point base pottery interrelates with other Mesolithic cultures that are peripheral to the expanse of the Neolithic farmer cultures. The special shape of this pottery has been related to transport by logboat in wetland areas. Especially related are Swifterbant in the Netherlands, Ellerbek and Ertebolle in Northern Germany and Scandinavia, "Ceramic Mesolithic" pottery of Belgium and Northern France (including non-Linear pottery such as La Hoguette, Bliquy, Villeneuve-Saint-Germain), the Roucedour culture in Southwest France and the river and lake areas of Northern Poland and Russia.Jutta Paulina de Roever - Swifterbant-aardewerk, een analyse van de neolithische nederzettingen bij swifterbnt, 5e millennium voor Christus, Barkhuis & Groningen University Library, Groningen 2004 [http://dissertations.ub.rug.nl/FILES/faculties/arts/2004/j.p.de.roever/thesis.pdf] English summary p.162-163]
Besides a western extension to the middle
Dniester down to the mouth of theDanube , it occupied the western third of the area of the laterYamna culture .Footnotes
ources
*
J. P. Mallory , "Dnieper-Donets Culture", "Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture ", Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997.
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