The long-distance exchange of amazonite and increasing social complexity in the Sudanese Neolithic

被引:8
|
作者
Zerboni, Andrea [1 ]
Salvatori, Sandro [2 ]
Vignola, Pietro [3 ]
el Rahman, Abd
Mohammed, Ali [4 ]
Usai, Donatella [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Milan, Dipartimento Sci Terra A Desio, Via L Mangiagalli 34, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[2] Ctr Studi Sudanesi & Sub Sahariani, Via Canizzano 128-D, I-31100 Treviso, Italy
[3] CNR, Ist Dinam Proc Ambientali, Via S Botticelli 23, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[4] Natl Corp Antiquities & Museums, Khartoum, Sudan
[5] Sapienza Univ Roma, Dipartimento Sci Antichita, Via Volsci 122, I-00185 Rome, Italy
关键词
Sudan; Neolithic; amazonite; social complexity; exchange; GRANITIC PEGMATITES; STONE BEADS; SHELL BEADS; AFRICA; TRADE; AGRICULTURE; ARCHAEOLOGY; FELDSPAR; NETWORKS; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.15184/aqy.2018.196
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The presence of exotic materials in funerary contexts in the Sudanese Nile Valley suggests increasing social complexity during the fifth and sixth millennia BC. Amazonite, both in artefact and raw material form, is frequently recovered from Neolithic Sudanese sites, yet its provenance remains unknown. Geochemical analyses of North and East African raw amazonite outcrops and artefacts found at the Neolithic cemetery of R12 in the Sudanese Nile Valley reveals southern Ethiopia as the source of the R12 amazonite. This research, along with data on different exotic materials from contemporaneous Sudanese cemeteries, suggests a previously unknown, long-distance North African exchange network and confirms the emergence of local craft specialisation as part of larger-scale developing social complexity.
引用
收藏
页码:1195 / 1209
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Psychology of Ultrarunning: Evaluating Validation, Social Identity, and Disharmony in the Long-Distance Experience
    Mueller, Thomas S.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL SPORT PSYCHOLOGY, 2023,
  • [42] Seasonal Food Scarcity Prompts Long-Distance Foraging by a Wild Social Bee
    Pope, Nathaniel S.
    Jha, Shalene
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2018, 191 (01): : 45 - 57
  • [43] Social networks improve leaderless group navigation by facilitating long-distance communication
    Bode, Nikolai W. F.
    Wood, A. Jamie
    Franks, Daniel W.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY, 2012, 58 (02) : 329 - 341
  • [44] Til Work Do Us Part: The Social Fallacy of Long-distance Commuting
    Sandow, Erika
    URBAN STUDIES, 2014, 51 (03) : 526 - 543
  • [45] Perceived Environmental, Individual and Social Factors of Long-Distance Collective Walking in Cities
    Yang, Peng
    Dai, Shanshan
    Xu, Honggang
    Ju, Peng
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2018, 15 (11)
  • [46] Social and ecological correlates of long-distance pant hoot calls in male chimpanzees
    Pawel Fedurek
    Ed Donnellan
    Katie E. Slocombe
    Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 2014, 68 : 1345 - 1355
  • [47] LONG-DISTANCE TRADE IN PRE-COLONIAL AFRICA AS A FACTOR OF SOCIAL DIVERSIFICATION
    PERSON, Y
    CAHIERS D ETUDES AFRICAINES, 1980, 20 (1-2): : 169 - 171
  • [48] EFFECTS OF LONG-DISTANCE TRANSPORT ON SOCIAL GROUPS OF RHESUS MACAQUES (MACACA MULATTA)
    Ramsey, J.
    Stavisky, R.
    Ethun, K.
    Wilson, M.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, 2015, 77 : 123 - 124
  • [49] Social and ecological correlates of long-distance pant hoot calls in male chimpanzees
    Fedurek, Pawel
    Donnellan, Ed
    Slocombe, Katie E.
    BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2014, 68 (08) : 1345 - 1355
  • [50] Increasing Liana Abundance and Basal Area in a Tropical Forest: The Contribution of Long-distance Clonal Colonization
    Yorke, Suzanne R.
    Schnitzer, Stefan A.
    Mascaro, Joseph
    Letcher, Susan G.
    Carson, Walter P.
    BIOTROPICA, 2013, 45 (03) : 317 - 324