Mapping a peripheral landscape: The Bronze Age transformation at Schnals Valley (South Tyrol/Italy)

Andreas Putzer
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Abstract

The evolving human impact on the high alpine side valleys of the Alps has increasingly become the focus of the scientific community in recent decades. Despite the ongoing controversy surrounding the integration of the newly acquired economic area into the settlement zone, the research conducted in the Schnals Valley has proven instrumental. The extensive archeological survey, which goes beyond the conventional investigation of visible structures or rock shelters, has led to the discovery of 20 high alpine Bronze Age sites, of which only 15% are visible above ground. This study presents compelling evidence of an Early Bronze Age intensification that spanned the 19th and 18th centuries BC and an intensification expressed through an increase and territorial distribution, as well as in the diversification of archeological record during the Middle Bronze Age. The cultivation of the research area seems to have been completed approximately in the 15th century BC, with only isolated Late Bronze Age sites being added. This transition parallels the contemporaneous development of central settlement areas, underscoring a symbiotic relationship between human activity in the high alpine regions and the growth of lowland communities. The detailed archeological investigation of six sites provides the first insight into the Bronze Age high alpine building culture and the interior design, in particular well constructed hearths associated with the production of secondary products. The investigated high alpine building culture of Schnals Valley corresponds to that of inner alpine settlements, and highlights the synchronous cultural development on the valley floor and in the high mountains. Crucially, this cultivation of the natural landscape of the Schnals Valley is intricately tied to the broader tapestry of cultural contacts and the exchange of goods throughout Europe during the Bronze Age.
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绘制外围景观图:施纳尔斯山谷(南蒂罗尔/意大利)青铜时代的转变
近几十年来,人类对阿尔卑斯山高山边谷不断演变的影响日益成为科学界关注的焦点。尽管围绕将新获得的经济区纳入居住区的问题一直存在争议,但在施纳尔斯山谷开展的研究已被证明具有重要意义。广泛的考古调查超越了对可见建筑或岩洞的传统调查,发现了 20 处高山青铜时代遗址,其中只有 15%在地面上可见。这项研究提供了令人信服的证据,证明青铜时代早期的强化跨越了公元前 19 世纪和 18 世纪,强化表现为青铜时代中期考古记录的增加和地域分布的多样化。大约在公元前 15 世纪,研究区域的耕作似乎已经完成,只增加了一些孤立的青铜时代晚期遗址。这一转变与同时代中部居住区的发展相吻合,凸显了高寒地区人类活动与低地社区发展之间的共生关系。通过对六个遗址的详细考古调查,我们首次了解了青铜时代高寒地区的建筑文化和内部设计,特别是与次要产品生产相关的构造精良的炉灶。所调查的施纳尔斯山谷高山建筑文化与内高山居住区的建筑文化相吻合,凸显了谷底和高山文化的同步发展。最重要的是,施纳尔斯山谷自然景观的发展与青铜时代整个欧洲更广泛的文化接触和商品交换密不可分。
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