martes, 17 de julio de 2012

Turkey. Ancient village holds lifestyle clues for archaeologists

Australian archaeologists are embarking on a study of one of the earliest ever records of a key transformation in human history, the end of the nomadic lifestyle.

The team, headed by Dr Andrew Fairbairn from the University of Queensland, will join with a British team next week to continue work on the excavation of a 10,000-year-old early village site in central Turkey.

The site, known as Boncuklu Höyük, is one of the earliest village sites found from the period when hunter-gatherer societies began to leave their nomadic lifestyle and take up farming.

Villagers lived in oval-shaped, mud brick houses and hunted, farmed and traded with other local communities on an area of wetlands which is now a dusty plain near the city of Konya.

"It's come to be one of the key transformations in human history because, basically, the development of our civilisations is routed in a lot of these social and economic transformations that happened around about this time," Dr Fairbairn told ABC News Online.

He says the site is one of the earliest found just outside the key Fertile Crescent area of eastern Turkey, Syria and Jordan where it is thought farming first originated.

The site is expected to help archaeologists understand how humans adapted to a sedentary lifestyle and how it spread across Europe.

"This farming lifestyle then spreads around the world - it goes across Europe and it goes across Asia," Dr Fairburn said.

"And so where Boncuklu is is that sort of first area where you have this spread of this new lifestyle.

"We've been very interested to find out whether it was, as it's always been suspected, due to farming people moving from this area of origin, the Fertile Crescent ... or whether it was due to the people who already lived there, lay hunter-gatherer societies, actually starting to develop and take up new crops and new ways of life.

"So Boncuklu is one of those very rare sites that allows us to investigate that time period."... abc.net.au

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