State of microbial communities in paleosols buried under kurgans of the desert-steppe zone in the Middle Bronze Age (27th–26th centuries BC) in relation to the dynamics of climate humidity

2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Khomutova ◽  
T. S. Demkina ◽  
A. V. Borisov ◽  
I. I. Shishlina
2019 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-115
Author(s):  
P. Makarowicz ◽  
J. Niebieszczański ◽  
M. Cwaliński ◽  
J. Romaniszyn ◽  
V. Rud ◽  
...  

Abstract The aim of this article is to view the spatial distribution of Upper Dniester Basin’s (Western Ukraine) barrows and to interpret their location principles. These monuments were often situated on the flattened summits of watershed ridges or hills. It appeared also that some of them were located on upper parts of gentle slopes of not more than 8° of inclination. Mounds appear within linear and group-linear arrangements and were rarely observed as clusters, while more specific adjustments to their location were dependant on local terrain morphology. Barrow alignments run along the elevated ridges, while clustered groups were situated in places where erosive indentations or denudation cavities prevented barrows from stretching in a linear pattern. It can be noted that during the spatial development of barrow alignments, more attention was paid to the intervisibility between the mounds, than to their visibility from other places in the landscape. The potential of observing at least one of the following groups of tumuli from every embankment indicates the direction of movement within the framework of the barrow landscape, perhaps augmented in the past by the presence of paths or “roads”. Examples of analogous or similar, in a certain sense even universal, practices in shaping barrow landscapes were documented also from various parts of Eurasia. Therefore, it is argued these traits were shared by all “barrow societies” and their origins can be traced to the steppe zone. Specific and repeatable patterns of barrow arrangements are a manifestation of certain knowledge and skills, transmitted over generations and immortalized in the landscape that symbolized the incorporation of territory by “barrow societies”. Characteristic mound alignments became a cultural code or institution, as it were – an instrument of familiarising previously unknown landscapes, facilitating movement and simultaneously expressing continuity of kin-lineages.


Author(s):  
А.А. Калмыков ◽  
Н.Я. Березина ◽  
Ю. Грески ◽  
М.В. Добровольская ◽  
А.П. Бужилова

Данная работа посвящена публикации и комплексному анализу погребения мастера-литейщика лолинской культуры эпохи средней бронзы, открытого в 2012 г. в степной зоне Центрального Предкавказья, недалеко от места слияния Большого Зеленчука и Кубани (рис. 1). По результатам радиоуглеродного датирования погребение отнесено к рубежу III и II тыс. до н. э. В нем обнаружен набор орудий для металлообработки: керамические тигель-льячка и сопло, а также каменный абразив (рис. 2: 2–4; 3: 2). До помещения в могилу инструменты использовались в практических целях по своему предназначению. С применением антропологических стандартов и биоархеологических подходов были изучены костные останки индивида. Это позволило реконструировать особенности его физического развития, состояния здоровья, образа жизни и, с привлечением аналогий, подтвердить связь его прижизненной деятельности с металлообработкой. This paper presents the publication and comprehensive analysis of a smelter’s grave attributed to the Lola culture of the Middle Bronze Age discovered in the steppe zone of the Central Fore-Caucasus in 2012 not far from the confluence of the Bolshoy Zelenchuk and the Kuban’ Rivers (fig. 1). The radiocarbon dates put this burial around the transition period from the 1st to the 2nd millennia BC. It revealed a set of tools for metal working such as a ceramic crucible/clay ladle as well as a stone abrasive (fig. 2, 2–4; 3, 2). Before the tools were placed into the grave, they had been used for intended purposes. Bone remains of the deceased person were studied with the use of anthropological standards and bioarchaeological approaches. It helped reconstruct specific features of the physical development of the deceased person, his health conditions, his lifestyle and, drawing on analogies, confirm that his life activity was related to metal working.


Author(s):  
A.D. Degtyareva

The article presents data on the morphological and typological characteristics of the trade tools of the Pet-rovka Culture of the South Trans-Urals and middle Tobol River region, originating from the sites of Chelyabinsk, Kurgan, and Tyumen Regions (77 specimens in total; 126 specimens in total including knives). According to the radiocarbon dating, the chronological period of the Petrovka sites in the Southern Trans-Urals spans the 19th through 18th centuries B.C. The distribution of tools into types was based on the techniques of typological division of the artifacts, taking into account their shape, presence of certain qualitative features, as well as consideration of the geographical and cultural areal of similar articles. The produce of the Southern Trans-Urals center is repre-sented by a diverse set of metal tools and by functioning of large settlements with metallurgical specialization — Kulevchi 3, Ustye 1, and Shibaevo 1. In the typology of the tool complex of the Petrovka Culture of the Southern Trans-Urals and the Middle Pre-Tobol region, common Eurasian types dominate, being genetically associated with the centers of the Middle Bronze Age of the Circumpontian Metallurgical Province — the Late Yamnaya-Poltavkino, Catacomb Culture, and metal-producing centers of the Corded Ware Culture — Volsk-Lbische and Balanovo. A pronounced variety of the morphotypes of the tools, especially knives, is characteristic of the initial stage of ethnogenesis of the cultures of the forest-steppe and steppe zone of Eurasia during the transitional pe-riod from the MBA to the LBA. Common Eurasian types of tools are characteristic of the cultures of the 1st phase of the Eurasian (West Asian) metallurgical province of the forest-steppe and steppe belt from the Don region to the Irtysh region: Abashevo; Sintashta; Early Srubnaya (Pokrovka); Petrovka (Early Alakul). Specific groups of tools inherent in the tribes of the Petrovka Culture were revealed: axes with a massive head; medium-curved sick-les with a prominent handle; socketed spearheads without eyelets and raised ribs along the edge of the socket; forged arrowheads with a through socket; knives with a straight prominent handle — double-edged and single-edged; knives with a forged open socket. In the appearance of some types of tools among the Petrovka population of the Trans-Urals, such as forged socketed tools — chisels, knives, arrows, double-edged knives with a prominent handle, and sickles with a small curvature, the influence of the Abashevo stereotypes of production is discernible. In the meantime, sufficient data have been obtained on the direct imports or on the conjugation of types of the metal tools and weapons of the Sintashta, Petrovka, and Seima-Turbino Cultures in closed complexes.


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