Understanding Diversity in Early Neolithic Pottery Production

A Study Case from Southwest Bulgaria

Authors

  • Tanya Dzhanfezova University of Oxford, School of Archaeology, United Kingdom
  • Chris Doherty University of Oxford, School of Archaeology, United Kingdom
  • Małgorzata Grębska-Kulow Regional Museum of History, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.47.7

Keywords:

pottery technology, Southeast Europe, Early Neolithic, raw materials, tradition, innovation

Abstract

By recovering and interpreting the hidden technological variability in the first pottery at Ilindentsi-Massovets, this paper reveals the innovative adaptations to local conditions that the adoption of pottery production, as a new technology, must have involved. Seventy-one samples were analysed using low-resolution binocular microscopy and high-resolution petrographic and scanning electron microscopy. The variety established within each of the major components in pottery production at the site is interpreted in the context of the local raw materials (availability) and technological approaches (decision making), thus reaching beyond the traditional interpretative models that suggest large-scale uniformity in Early Neolithic pottery production across extensive European regions.

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Published

1. 12. 2020

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dzhanfezova, T., Doherty, C., & Grębska-Kulow, M. (2020). Understanding Diversity in Early Neolithic Pottery Production: A Study Case from Southwest Bulgaria. Documenta Praehistorica, 47, 110-125. https://doi.org/10.4312/dp.47.7