3.8 Article

The younger Dryas layer at Boncuklu Tarla and the beginning of village life in the upper Tigris Basin

Journal

ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ASIA
Volume 35, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ara.2023.100460

Keywords

Younger Dryas; Early Holocene Period; Zarzian; Upper Tigris Basin; Boncuklu Tarla

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Recent archaeological excavations in the Upper Tigris Basin have provided new finds from the pre-PPNA Period, the Younger Dryas, which have reopened discussions on the Proto-Neolithic Period in the East Jazeera and Northwest Zagros Region. The discoveries in the Boncuklu Tarla settlement area indicate the presence of semi-sedentary or sedentary communities in the region, unlike the Natufian culture known in the Southern Levant Region.
Recent archaeological excavations in the Boncuklu Tarla, cemka Ho & BULL;yuk, and Ko & BULL;rtik Tepe settlements in the Upper Tigris Basin have provided a number of finds from the pre-PPNA Period, the Younger Dryas. The new data also opens up the concept of the Proto-Neolithic Period to discussion again, which has been controversial for a long time in the East Jazeera and Northwest Zagros Region. In this context, architectural remains and other small finds discovered in the Boncuklu Tarla settlement area make it possible to re-examine the transition to sedentary life in the Upper Tigris Basin during the Late Epipalaeolithic/Proto-Neolithic Period and the PPNA Period. These archaeological finds show that there were some semi-sedentary or sedentary communities in the Upper Tigris Basin, which exhibits unique geographical and climatic features, starting with the Younger Dryas Period. This is different from the Natufian culture that is thought to have emerged in the Mediterranean temperate climate zone and is known only in the Southern Levant Region.

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