3.8 Article

Spatio-temporal patterns of cemetery use among Middle Holocene hunter-gatherers of Cis-Baikal, Eastern Siberia

Journal

ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH IN ASIA
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ara.2020.100253

Keywords

Middle Holocene; Hunter-gatherers; Baikal region; Eastern Siberia; Cemeteries; Patterns of use; Radiocarbon dating; Radiocarbon modelling

Categories

Funding

  1. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada [410-2000-1000, 412-2005-1004, 412-2011-1001, 8952018-1004]
  2. University of Alberta
  3. Government of the Russian Federation [075-15-2019-866]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper examines the changes in patterns of hunter-gatherer cemeteries from the Late Mesolithic to Early Bronze Age in the Cis-Baikal region of Eastern Siberia using a Kernel Density methodology. The analysis reveals distinct patterns in individual cemeteries and broader regional shifts in burial events frequency, although caution is advised due to sampling biases. Comprehensive datasets from fully excavated cemeteries offer new and important insights into Middle Holocene hunter-gatherer burial practices in Cis-Baikal.
Hunter-gatherer archaeology typically focusses on the details of subsistence strategies and material culture and, in the case of cemeteries, on various aspects of mortuary practices, beliefs, and social differentiation. This paper aims to look rather at patterns of change over time and space in how past hunter-gatherer cemeteries were used from Late Mesolithic to Early Bronze Age (similar to 8600-3500 cal. BP) in the Cis-Baikal region of Eastern Siberia. The approach is based on a Kernel Density methodology applied to 560 radiocarbon dates obtained for individual burials from 65 cemeteries and representing 5 distinct mortuary traditions. This enables a number of different types of analysis to be performed at different scales: (1) It is possible to examine the overall tempo of burial events at each cemetery or a group of cemeteries; (2) Within each cemetery the spatial patterns of the sequence of graves and burials can be analyzed further; (3) It is possible to compare the different cemetery-specific chronologies within the micro-region or regional context; and (4) Although tentatively at this time, the spatiotemporal pattern of cemetery use over the whole region and can be visualised. The spatio-temporal analysis of individual cemeteries shows that each one had its own pattern, some very distinct and clear in their characteristics, which relate to the role the cemetery played within the microregional or regional population. On the regional scale some broader patterns such as shifts in frequency of burial events between microregions within mortuary traditions are visible. However, at this scale the existing sampling biases require caution in assessment of the results and future fieldwork will help improve the analysis and insights. On the other hand, many of the individual cemeteries have been excavated in full and such comprehensive datasets already provide a range of entirely new and important insights into cemetery use by the Middle Holocene hunter-gatherers of Cis-Baikal.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available