Bone-artefact production in late Neolithic central China: evidence from Pingliangtai

Antiquity Pub Date : 2024-04-15 DOI:10.15184/aqy.2024.56
Xiaochen Pei, Yanpeng Cao, Yidi Yang, Chun Mun Liew, Chi Zhang, Ling Qin, Zhenhua Deng, Shuzheng Zhu, Yan Chen, Hao Zhao, Chao Ning, Mark J. Hudson, Ying Zhang, Hai Zhang
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Abstract

As an important component of prehistoric subsistence, an understanding of bone-working is essential for interpreting the evolution of early complex societies, yet worked bones are rarely systematically collected in China. Here, the authors apply multiple analytical methods to worked bones from the Longshan site of Pingliangtai, in central China, showing that Neolithic bone-working in this area, with cervid as the main raw material, was mature but localised, household-based and self-sufficient. The introduction of cattle in the Late Neolithic precipitated a shift in bone-working traditions but it was only later, in the Bronze Age, that cattle bones were utilised in a specialised fashion and dedicated bone-working industries emerged in urban centres.
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新石器时代晚期华中地区的骨器生产:来自平凉台的证据
作为史前生存的一个重要组成部分,了解骨器加工对解释早期复杂社会的演变至关重要,但在中国很少系统地收集加工骨器。在本文中,作者运用多种分析方法对中国中部平凉台龙山遗址出土的加工骨器进行了分析,结果表明,该地区新石器时代的骨器加工以牛为主要原料,工艺成熟,但具有地方性、家庭性和自给自足性。新石器时代晚期牛的引入促进了骨器加工传统的转变,但直到青铜时代后期,牛骨才被专门利用,城市中心出现了专门的骨器加工业。
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AQY volume 98 issue 399 Cover and Front matter AQY volume 98 issue 399 Cover and Back matter Disarticulation, evisceration and excarnation: Neolithic mortuary practices at Dingsishan, southern China Richard Bussmann. 2023. The archaeology of pharaonic Egypt: society and culture, 2700–1700 BC. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 978-11070-303-81 hardback £100. Bone-artefact production in late Neolithic central China: evidence from Pingliangtai
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