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Ertebølle culture

The Ertebølle culture (c. 5,300 BCE – 3,950 BCE) (Danish pronunciation: [ˈɛɐ̯təˌpølə]) is a hunter-gatherer and fisher, pottery-making culture dating to the end of the Mesolithic period. The culture was concentrated in Southern Scandinavia. It is named after the type site, a location in the small village of Ertebølle on Limfjorden in Danish Jutland. In the 1890s the National Museum of Denmark excavated heaps of oyster shells there, mixed with mussels, snails, bones, and artefacts of bone, antler, and flint, which were evaluated as kitchen middens (Danish køkkenmødding), or refuse dumps. Accordingly, the culture is less-commonly named the Kitchen Midden. As it is approximately identical to the Ellerbek culture of Schleswig-Holstein, the combined name, Ertebølle-Ellerbek is often used. The Ellerbek culture (German Ellerbek-Kultur) is named after a type site in Ellerbek, a community on the edge of Kiel, Germany.

Ertebølle culture
Geographical rangeEurope
PeriodMesolithic Europe
Datesc. 5,300 BCE – c. 3,950 BCE
Preceded byKongemose culture
Followed byFunnelbeaker culture

In the 1960s and 1970s another closely related culture was found in the (now dry) Noordoostpolder in the Netherlands, near the village Swifterbant and the former island of Urk. Named the Swifterbant culture (5,300 – 3,400 BCE) they show a transition from hunter-gatherer to both animal husbandry, primarily cows and pigs, and cultivation of barley and emmer wheat.[1] During the formative stages contact with nearby Linear Pottery culture settlements in Limburg has been detected. Like the Ertebølle culture, they lived near open water, in this case creeks, riverdunes, and bogs along post-glacial banks of the Overijsselse Vechte. Recent excavations[2] show a local continuity going back to (at least) 5,600 BCE, when burial practices resembled the contemporary gravefields in Denmark and South Sweden "in all details", suggesting only part of a diverse ancestral "Ertebølle"-like heritage was locally continued into the later (Middle Neolithic) Swifterbant tradition (4,200 – 3,400 BCE).

The Ertebølle culture was roughly contemporaneous with the Linear Pottery culture, food-producers whose northernmost border was located just to the south. The Ertebølle did not practice agriculture but it did utilize domestic grain in some capacity, which it must have obtained from the south.

The Ertebølle culture replaced the earlier Kongemose culture of Denmark. It was limited to the north by the Scandinavian Nøstvet and Lihult cultures. It is divided into an early phase c. 5,300 BCE – c. 4,500 BCE, and a later phase c. 4,500 BCE – 3,950 BCE. Shortly after 4,100 BCE the Ertebølle began to expand along the Baltic coast at least as far as Rügen. Shortly thereafter it was replaced by the Funnelbeaker culture.

In recent years archaeologists have found the acronym EBK most convenient, parallel to LBK for German Linearbandkeramik (Linear Pottery culture) and TRB for German Trichterbecher, Danish Tragtbæger (Funnelbeaker culture), and Dutch trechterbekercultuur. Ostensibly for Ertebølle Kultur, EBK could be either German or Danish, and has the added advantage that Ellerbek also begins with E.

Description edit

Environment edit

The Ertebølle culture falls within the Atlantic climate period and the Littorina Sea phase of the Baltic Sea basin; that is, climate was warmer and moister than today, deciduous forests covered Europe, and the Baltic was at higher levels than today, and was a salt sea, rather than a brackish one or a lake. The Baltic coastline was often flooded to a level of 5m-6m higher than now. Jutland was an archipelago. Marshes were extensive, with tracts of shallow water rich in fish. The environment itself thus invited settlement.

The Ertebølle population settled on promontories, near or on beaches, on islands, and along rivers and estuaries away from the dense forests. The environment most like the then range of the Ertebølle is the Wadden Sea region of the North Sea from the Netherlands to Denmark. Due to chance fluctuations in the sea level during Ertebølle occupation of the coast and subsequently, many of the culture sites are currently under 3m-4m of water. Some have been excavated by underwater archaeology. The artifacts are in an excellent state of preservation, having been protected by anaerobic mud. On the disadvantage side, water movements have disrupted many sites.

Cultural remains edit

The Ertebølle population derived its living from a variety of means, but chiefly from the sea. They prospered, grew healthy and multiplied on a diet of fish. They were masters of the inland waters, which they traversed in paddled dugouts. Like many peoples known in history, they were able to hunt whales and seals from their dugouts. Their materials were mainly wood, with bone, antler and flint for functions requiring harder surfaces. Homes were constructed of brush or light wood. The materials encourage us to view them as transitory. They were, nevertheless, able to place the dead in longer-used cemeteries. Perhaps the dwelling-places were transitory, but the territories were not.

Physical anthropology edit

 
Cro-magnon skull

Skeletal remains are relatively meagre. They have been studied and described in great detail from an anthropometric, or "man-measuring", point of view. Without resorting to this specialised language, the main conclusions are as follows. On the one hand they did not differ from the current inhabitants of Denmark in skeleton. Soft tissue features, being known through reconstruction only, leave some room for variation.

On the other hand, many skulls evidence facial features or dimensions of Cro-magnons. The latter type prevailed in Late Paleolithic times in Europe, supplanting Neanderthal man there. Genetic analysis by scientists from the University of Ferrara (Italy) indicates that the Cro-magnons were ancestral to the current population of Europe.

Two hypotheses concerning the origin of the Ertebølle population are therefore possible and have been proposed. One is that in the remains we are seeing an intermediate phase in the evolution of the population of Scania. The second is that the Ertebølle population was an admixture of agrarian southerners with indigenous Scanians over a permeable border. Both views are supported by the evidence.

Evidence of conflict edit

There is some evidence of conflict between Ertebølle settlements: an arrowhead in a pelvis at Skateholm, Sweden; a bone point in a throat at Vedbæk, Zealand; a bone point in the chest at Stora Biers, Sweden. More significant is evidence of cannibalism at Dyrholmen, Jutland, and Møllegabet on Ærø. There human bones were broken open to obtain the marrow. The evidence of marrow exploitation in the Ertebølle remains indicates dietary rather than ritual cannibalism; as marrow is never the subject of ritualistic cannibalism.[3]

Similar cultures edit

The Ertebølle culture is of a general type called Late Mesolithic, of which other examples can be found in Swifterbant culture, Zedmar culture, Narva culture and in Russia. Some would include the Nøstvet culture and Lihult culture to the north as well. The various locations seem fragmented and isolated, but that characteristic may be an accident of discovery. Perhaps if all the submarine sites were known, a continuous coastal culture would appear from the Netherlands to the lakes of Russia, but this has yet to be demonstrated.

Economy edit

Ertebølle peoples lived primarily on seafood.

Fishing industry edit

 
Ceramic boat model

The mainstay of Ertebølle economy was fish. Three main methods of fishing are supported by the evidence, such as the boats and other equipment found in fragmentary form at Tybrind Vig and elsewhere: trapping, angling, and spearing.

To trap fish, the fishermen constructed fish fences, or weirs, of approximately 4m-long hazel sticks set upright in the mud at the bottom of shallow water. The fish must have been corralled by some method and then harvested at will. Wickerwork traps were also used.

Ertebølle fishermen angled with hooks made of red deer bone, of which at least one example has been found with line attached. They spear-fished with spears made of shafts to which hazel tines were attached. Boats were dugouts a few feet wide propelled by paddles constructed of shafts to which leaf-shaped or heart-shaped blades were attached. At one end a layer of clay spread on the bottom supported hot coals, an indispensable source of heat if you were going to spend much time in the boat.

Dozens of species of fish have been found in the middens. Some of the most common are pike, whitefish, cod, and ling at Østenkaer, anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus), three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) and eel at Krabbesholm. The oldest site, Yderhede, featured remains of flatfish and sharks: porbeagle, topeshark, smoothhound, and (at Lystrup Enge) spurdog. At Egsminde herring, cyprinids and European perch were found. The presence of deep-sea fish and sharks probably indicates the Ertebølle fishermen often ventured out on deep water. Whether they did so in their marshland dugouts or also owned larger, ocean-going ones is an answer that waits for more evidence.

Whaling and sealing industry edit

At Lystrup Enge, Yderhede and other places the bones of cetaceans and pinnipeds have been found; specifically, of killer whales, the white-beaked dolphin, and the bottlenose dolphin among the cetaceans. These are not animals requiring whaling voyages on the high seas. They could have been washed onto the shore or hunted in shallow waters.

The seals are the ringed seal, the harp seal and the grey seal. These animals for the most part were common in the Littorina Sea but are not found in the Baltic Sea now. Again, they could have been taken on land or in the shallows.

The species found raise the question of whether a whaling or sealing industry existed as such or whether the bones came from opportunistic scavenging. There is no direct evidence of voyaging out in dugouts to harpoon whales that could kill the voyagers in an instant. However, one of the two main types of pottery used was the blubber lamp, a small, oval deep dish in which you ignited a chunk of blubber or even oil with a wick. The widespread use of this lamp implies a widespread industry to obtain blubber; i.e., professional whale and seal hunting.

Hunting industry edit

Judging from the remains of animal bones at their sites, the Ertebølle people hunted mainly three types of land animals: large forest browsers, fur animals and maritime birds.

The forest mammals are the red deer and roe deer, which were dietary staples, and the wild boar, european elk, less frequently the aurochs, and a rare horse, believed to have been wild. Only a left foreleg from Østenkær remains. It offers definitive proof that horses lived in the forests of Europe. On the plains to the east they are only found in association with man. The boar were supplemented by swine with mixed European and Near Eastern ancestry, obtained through their Neolithic farming neighbors, as early as 4,600 BCE.[4]

The fur animals are fairly widespread: the beaver, squirrel, polecat, badger, fox, lynx. Furs might have served as a currency and may have been traded to some degree, but this is speculation.

Maritime birds must have been easily taken in the marshes and ponds of the region: red-throated diver, black-throated diver, Dalmatian pelican, capercaille, grebe, cormorant, swan, and duck.

In addition are a few others: the dog and the wolf, and two snakes, the common grass snake, and the Aesculapian snake. As snakes do not appear in the art, it is impossible to say what cultural impact they had, if any.

Plant use edit

The EBK gathered berries for consumption and also prepared a number of wild plants, judging from the seed remains of plants that could not be consumed without preparation. Of the berries that have been found are raspberry (Rubus idaeus), dewberry (Rubus caesius), wild strawberry, dogwood (Cornus sanguinea), hawthorn (Crataegus monogyna and Crataegus oxyacantha), rowanberry (Sorbus aucuparia), crab apple, and rose hips.

Some seeds usually made into gruel in historical times are acorn and manna grass (Glyceria fluitans). Roots of the sea beet (Beta maritima) were prepared as well. That species is ancestral to modern domestic beets. Greens could have been boiled from nettle (Urtica dioica), orache (Atriplex), and goosefoot (Chenopodium album).

Some of the pottery evidences grain impressions, which some interpret as the use of food imported from the south. Certainly, they did not need to import food and were probably better nourished than the southerners. Analysis of charred remains in one pot indicates that it at least was used for fermenting a mixture of blood and nuts. Some have therefore guessed that fermentation of grain was used to produce beer.

Finally, fragments of textiles from Tybrind Vig were woven in the needle-netting technique from spun plant fibers.

Tools and art edit

Settlement life edit

The many settlements on the coast and in the hinterland vary between large all-year-round settlements and smaller seasonal settlements. A settlement consisted of huts, probably brush supported by posts. The huts were in no special order. Fire pits located outside the huts indicate that most village functions were performed outdoors, with the dwellings used perhaps for storage and sleeping. At the time winters were mild.

An external fireplace from Ronaes Skae was constructed as a perimeter of stones surrounding a mud and clay hearth on which charred wood was found in a spoke pattern. The wood was collected from the shore. Fungus was used for tinder.

Pottery edit

 
Pottery

Pottery was manufactured from native clays tempered with sand, crushed stone and organic material. The EBK pot was made by coil technique, being fired on the open bed of hot coals. It was not like the neighbouring Neolithic Linearbandkeramik and appears related instead to a pottery type that first appears in Europe in the Samara region of Russia c. 7,000 cal BCE, and spread up the Volga to the Eastern Baltic and then westward along the shore.[5]

Two main types are found, a beaker and a lamp. The beaker is a pot-bellied pot narrowing at the neck, with a flanged, outward-turning rim. The bottom was typically formed into a point or bulb (the "funnel") of some sort that supported the pot when it was placed in clay or sand. One can imagine a sort of mobile pantry consisting of rows of jars set now in the hut, now by the fire, now in the clay layer at the bottom of a dugout.

The beaker came in various sizes from 8 to 50 cm high and from 5 to 20 cm in diameter. Decoration filled the entire surface with horizontal bands of fingertip or fingernail impressions. It must have been in the decoration phase that grains of wheat and barley left their impression in the clay. Late in the period technique and decoration became slightly more varied and sophisticated: the walls were thinner and different motifs were used in the impressions: chevrons, cord marks, and punctures made with animal bones. Handles are sometimes added and the rims may turn in instead of out.

The blubber lamp was molded from a single piece of clay. The use of such lamps suggests some household activity in the huts after dark.

Tool kit edit

 
flake axe

The flint industry evolved a high and unified standard with small and flake axes, long lithic flakes (knives), and arrow heads. However, tools of many materials were in use: wood prongs and points, antler parts, carved bone tools.

Art edit

Paddles from Tybrind Vig show traces of highly developed and artistic woodcarving. This is an example of the embellishment of functional pieces. The population also polished and engraved non-functional or not obviously functional pieces of bone or antler. Motifs were predominantly geometric with some anthropomorphic or zoomorphic forms. Also in evidence (for example, at Fanø) are polished amber representations of animals, such as birds, boars, and bears. Jewelry was made of animal teeth or decorative shells. To what extent any of these pieces were symbolic of wealth and status is not clear.

Funerary customs edit

 
A late Scandinavian Hunter-Gatherer, buried seated, dated circa 7,000 BP, from Skateholm, near Trelleborg in southwest Sweden. Reconstruction by Oscar Nilsson, Trelleborgs Museum.[6][7]

Cemeteries, such as the ones at Vedbæk and Skateholm, give a "sedentary" character to the settlements. Red ochre and deer antlers were placed in some graves, but not others. Some social distinctions may therefore have been made. There was some appreciation of sexual dimorphism: the women wore necklaces and belts of animal teeth and shells. No special body position was used. Both burial and cremation were practiced. At Møllegabet, an individual was buried in a dugout, which some see as the beginning of Scandinavian boat burials.

Skateholm contained also a dog cemetery. Dog graves were prepared and gifted the same as human, with ochre, antler, and grave goods. In either history or prehistory the dog is an invaluable animal and is often treated as a person.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Europe's First Farmers – T. Douglas Price, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Cambridge University Press 2000 [1]
  2. ^ L. P. Louwe Kooijmans – Trijntje van de Betuweroute, Jachtkampen uit de Steentijd te Hardinxveld-Giessendam, 1998, Spiegel Historiael 33, blz. 423–428, [2] 2007-07-26 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Villa, P. Cannibalism in the Neolithic, Science 25 Jul 1986: Vol. 233, Issue 4762, pp. 431-437 DOI: 10.1126/science.233.4762.431
  4. ^ DNA evidence from 63 animals at Ertebølle and other EBK sites, reported in "European hunter-gatherers domesticated pigs earlier than thought", Christian Science Monitor, 27 August 2013: accessed 28 August 2013.
  5. ^ Fredrik Hallgren, The Introduction of Ceramic Technology Around the Baltic Sea in the 6th millennium, in Helena Knutsson, (ed.), Coast to Coast – Arrival, Coast to Coast book 10 (2004), pp. 123–142; Detlef Gronenborn, Beyond the models: Neolithisation in Central Europe, Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 144 (2007), p.87; Jutta Paulina de Roever, The Pottery of Hunter-Gatherers in Transition to Agriculture, Illustrated by the Swifterbant Culture, the Netherlands in Dragos Gheorghiu (ed.), Early Farmers, Late Foragers, and Ceramic Traditions: On the Beginning of Pottery in the Near East and Europe (2009), pp. 150–166.
  6. ^ . National Geographic Magazine. 11 November 2019. Archived from the original on September 3, 2022.
  7. ^ "Trelleborgs Museum exhibit". www.trelleborg.se (in Swedish). 1 April 2022.

External links edit

  • Philippsen, Bente; Meadows, John (2014). "Inland Ertebølle Culture: the importance of aquatic resources and the freshwater reservoir effect in radiocarbon dates from pottery food crusts". Internet Archaeology (37). doi:10.11141/ia.37.9.

Locations

  • Excavating submerged Stone Age sites in Denmark the Tybrind Vig example
  • The Wadden Sea Region

Economy

  • Regionality and biotope exploitation in Danish Ertebølle and adjacent periods 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • Art and artifacts

ertebølle, culture, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ertebolle culture news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message The Ertebolle culture c 5 300 BCE 3 950 BCE Danish pronunciation ˈɛɐ teˌpole is a hunter gatherer and fisher pottery making culture dating to the end of the Mesolithic period The culture was concentrated in Southern Scandinavia It is named after the type site a location in the small village of Ertebolle on Limfjorden in Danish Jutland In the 1890s the National Museum of Denmark excavated heaps of oyster shells there mixed with mussels snails bones and artefacts of bone antler and flint which were evaluated as kitchen middens Danish kokkenmodding or refuse dumps Accordingly the culture is less commonly named the Kitchen Midden As it is approximately identical to the Ellerbek culture of Schleswig Holstein the combined name Ertebolle Ellerbek is often used The Ellerbek culture German Ellerbek Kultur is named after a type site in Ellerbek a community on the edge of Kiel Germany Ertebolle cultureGeographical rangeEuropePeriodMesolithic EuropeDatesc 5 300 BCE c 3 950 BCEPreceded byKongemose cultureFollowed byFunnelbeaker culture In the 1960s and 1970s another closely related culture was found in the now dry Noordoostpolder in the Netherlands near the village Swifterbant and the former island of Urk Named the Swifterbant culture 5 300 3 400 BCE they show a transition from hunter gatherer to both animal husbandry primarily cows and pigs and cultivation of barley and emmer wheat 1 During the formative stages contact with nearby Linear Pottery culture settlements in Limburg has been detected Like the Ertebolle culture they lived near open water in this case creeks riverdunes and bogs along post glacial banks of the Overijsselse Vechte Recent excavations 2 show a local continuity going back to at least 5 600 BCE when burial practices resembled the contemporary gravefields in Denmark and South Sweden in all details suggesting only part of a diverse ancestral Ertebolle like heritage was locally continued into the later Middle Neolithic Swifterbant tradition 4 200 3 400 BCE The Ertebolle culture was roughly contemporaneous with the Linear Pottery culture food producers whose northernmost border was located just to the south The Ertebolle did not practice agriculture but it did utilize domestic grain in some capacity which it must have obtained from the south The Ertebolle culture replaced the earlier Kongemose culture of Denmark It was limited to the north by the Scandinavian Nostvet and Lihult cultures It is divided into an early phase c 5 300 BCE c 4 500 BCE and a later phase c 4 500 BCE 3 950 BCE Shortly after 4 100 BCE the Ertebolle began to expand along the Baltic coast at least as far as Rugen Shortly thereafter it was replaced by the Funnelbeaker culture In recent years archaeologists have found the acronym EBK most convenient parallel to LBK for German Linearbandkeramik Linear Pottery culture and TRB for German Trichterbecher Danish Tragtbaeger Funnelbeaker culture and Dutch trechterbekercultuur Ostensibly for Ertebolle Kultur EBK could be either German or Danish and has the added advantage that Ellerbek also begins with E Contents 1 Description 1 1 Environment 1 2 Cultural remains 1 3 Physical anthropology 1 4 Evidence of conflict 1 5 Similar cultures 2 Economy 2 1 Fishing industry 2 2 Whaling and sealing industry 2 3 Hunting industry 2 4 Plant use 3 Tools and art 3 1 Settlement life 3 2 Pottery 3 3 Tool kit 3 4 Art 3 5 Funerary customs 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDescription editEnvironment edit The Ertebolle culture falls within the Atlantic climate period and the Littorina Sea phase of the Baltic Sea basin that is climate was warmer and moister than today deciduous forests covered Europe and the Baltic was at higher levels than today and was a salt sea rather than a brackish one or a lake The Baltic coastline was often flooded to a level of 5m 6m higher than now Jutland was an archipelago Marshes were extensive with tracts of shallow water rich in fish The environment itself thus invited settlement The Ertebolle population settled on promontories near or on beaches on islands and along rivers and estuaries away from the dense forests The environment most like the then range of the Ertebolle is the Wadden Sea region of the North Sea from the Netherlands to Denmark Due to chance fluctuations in the sea level during Ertebolle occupation of the coast and subsequently many of the culture sites are currently under 3m 4m of water Some have been excavated by underwater archaeology The artifacts are in an excellent state of preservation having been protected by anaerobic mud On the disadvantage side water movements have disrupted many sites Cultural remains edit The Ertebolle population derived its living from a variety of means but chiefly from the sea They prospered grew healthy and multiplied on a diet of fish They were masters of the inland waters which they traversed in paddled dugouts Like many peoples known in history they were able to hunt whales and seals from their dugouts Their materials were mainly wood with bone antler and flint for functions requiring harder surfaces Homes were constructed of brush or light wood The materials encourage us to view them as transitory They were nevertheless able to place the dead in longer used cemeteries Perhaps the dwelling places were transitory but the territories were not Physical anthropology edit nbsp Cro magnon skull Skeletal remains are relatively meagre They have been studied and described in great detail from an anthropometric or man measuring point of view Without resorting to this specialised language the main conclusions are as follows On the one hand they did not differ from the current inhabitants of Denmark in skeleton Soft tissue features being known through reconstruction only leave some room for variation On the other hand many skulls evidence facial features or dimensions of Cro magnons The latter type prevailed in Late Paleolithic times in Europe supplanting Neanderthal man there Genetic analysis by scientists from the University of Ferrara Italy indicates that the Cro magnons were ancestral to the current population of Europe Two hypotheses concerning the origin of the Ertebolle population are therefore possible and have been proposed One is that in the remains we are seeing an intermediate phase in the evolution of the population of Scania The second is that the Ertebolle population was an admixture of agrarian southerners with indigenous Scanians over a permeable border Both views are supported by the evidence Evidence of conflict edit There is some evidence of conflict between Ertebolle settlements an arrowhead in a pelvis at Skateholm Sweden a bone point in a throat at Vedbaek Zealand a bone point in the chest at Stora Biers Sweden More significant is evidence of cannibalism at Dyrholmen Jutland and Mollegabet on AEro There human bones were broken open to obtain the marrow The evidence of marrow exploitation in the Ertebolle remains indicates dietary rather than ritual cannibalism as marrow is never the subject of ritualistic cannibalism 3 Similar cultures edit The Ertebolle culture is of a general type called Late Mesolithic of which other examples can be found in Swifterbant culture Zedmar culture Narva culture and in Russia Some would include the Nostvet culture and Lihult culture to the north as well The various locations seem fragmented and isolated but that characteristic may be an accident of discovery Perhaps if all the submarine sites were known a continuous coastal culture would appear from the Netherlands to the lakes of Russia but this has yet to be demonstrated Economy editErtebolle peoples lived primarily on seafood Fishing industry edit nbsp Ceramic boat model The mainstay of Ertebolle economy was fish Three main methods of fishing are supported by the evidence such as the boats and other equipment found in fragmentary form at Tybrind Vig and elsewhere trapping angling and spearing To trap fish the fishermen constructed fish fences or weirs of approximately 4m long hazel sticks set upright in the mud at the bottom of shallow water The fish must have been corralled by some method and then harvested at will Wickerwork traps were also used Ertebolle fishermen angled with hooks made of red deer bone of which at least one example has been found with line attached They spear fished with spears made of shafts to which hazel tines were attached Boats were dugouts a few feet wide propelled by paddles constructed of shafts to which leaf shaped or heart shaped blades were attached At one end a layer of clay spread on the bottom supported hot coals an indispensable source of heat if you were going to spend much time in the boat Dozens of species of fish have been found in the middens Some of the most common are pike whitefish cod and ling at Ostenkaer anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus three spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus and eel at Krabbesholm The oldest site Yderhede featured remains of flatfish and sharks porbeagle topeshark smoothhound and at Lystrup Enge spurdog At Egsminde herring cyprinids and European perch were found The presence of deep sea fish and sharks probably indicates the Ertebolle fishermen often ventured out on deep water Whether they did so in their marshland dugouts or also owned larger ocean going ones is an answer that waits for more evidence Whaling and sealing industry edit At Lystrup Enge Yderhede and other places the bones of cetaceans and pinnipeds have been found specifically of killer whales the white beaked dolphin and the bottlenose dolphin among the cetaceans These are not animals requiring whaling voyages on the high seas They could have been washed onto the shore or hunted in shallow waters The seals are the ringed seal the harp seal and the grey seal These animals for the most part were common in the Littorina Sea but are not found in the Baltic Sea now Again they could have been taken on land or in the shallows The species found raise the question of whether a whaling or sealing industry existed as such or whether the bones came from opportunistic scavenging There is no direct evidence of voyaging out in dugouts to harpoon whales that could kill the voyagers in an instant However one of the two main types of pottery used was the blubber lamp a small oval deep dish in which you ignited a chunk of blubber or even oil with a wick The widespread use of this lamp implies a widespread industry to obtain blubber i e professional whale and seal hunting Hunting industry edit Judging from the remains of animal bones at their sites the Ertebolle people hunted mainly three types of land animals large forest browsers fur animals and maritime birds The forest mammals are the red deer and roe deer which were dietary staples and the wild boar european elk less frequently the aurochs and a rare horse believed to have been wild Only a left foreleg from Ostenkaer remains It offers definitive proof that horses lived in the forests of Europe On the plains to the east they are only found in association with man The boar were supplemented by swine with mixed European and Near Eastern ancestry obtained through their Neolithic farming neighbors as early as 4 600 BCE 4 The fur animals are fairly widespread the beaver squirrel polecat badger fox lynx Furs might have served as a currency and may have been traded to some degree but this is speculation Maritime birds must have been easily taken in the marshes and ponds of the region red throated diver black throated diver Dalmatian pelican capercaille grebe cormorant swan and duck In addition are a few others the dog and the wolf and two snakes the common grass snake and the Aesculapian snake As snakes do not appear in the art it is impossible to say what cultural impact they had if any Plant use edit The EBK gathered berries for consumption and also prepared a number of wild plants judging from the seed remains of plants that could not be consumed without preparation Of the berries that have been found are raspberry Rubus idaeus dewberry Rubus caesius wild strawberry dogwood Cornus sanguinea hawthorn Crataegus monogyna and Crataegus oxyacantha rowanberry Sorbus aucuparia crab apple and rose hips Some seeds usually made into gruel in historical times are acorn and manna grass Glyceria fluitans Roots of the sea beet Beta maritima were prepared as well That species is ancestral to modern domestic beets Greens could have been boiled from nettle Urtica dioica orache Atriplex and goosefoot Chenopodium album Some of the pottery evidences grain impressions which some interpret as the use of food imported from the south Certainly they did not need to import food and were probably better nourished than the southerners Analysis of charred remains in one pot indicates that it at least was used for fermenting a mixture of blood and nuts Some have therefore guessed that fermentation of grain was used to produce beer Finally fragments of textiles from Tybrind Vig were woven in the needle netting technique from spun plant fibers Tools and art editSettlement life edit The many settlements on the coast and in the hinterland vary between large all year round settlements and smaller seasonal settlements A settlement consisted of huts probably brush supported by posts The huts were in no special order Fire pits located outside the huts indicate that most village functions were performed outdoors with the dwellings used perhaps for storage and sleeping At the time winters were mild An external fireplace from Ronaes Skae was constructed as a perimeter of stones surrounding a mud and clay hearth on which charred wood was found in a spoke pattern The wood was collected from the shore Fungus was used for tinder Pottery edit nbsp Pottery Pottery was manufactured from native clays tempered with sand crushed stone and organic material The EBK pot was made by coil technique being fired on the open bed of hot coals It was not like the neighbouring Neolithic Linearbandkeramik and appears related instead to a pottery type that first appears in Europe in the Samara region of Russia c 7 000 cal BCE and spread up the Volga to the Eastern Baltic and then westward along the shore 5 Two main types are found a beaker and a lamp The beaker is a pot bellied pot narrowing at the neck with a flanged outward turning rim The bottom was typically formed into a point or bulb the funnel of some sort that supported the pot when it was placed in clay or sand One can imagine a sort of mobile pantry consisting of rows of jars set now in the hut now by the fire now in the clay layer at the bottom of a dugout The beaker came in various sizes from 8 to 50 cm high and from 5 to 20 cm in diameter Decoration filled the entire surface with horizontal bands of fingertip or fingernail impressions It must have been in the decoration phase that grains of wheat and barley left their impression in the clay Late in the period technique and decoration became slightly more varied and sophisticated the walls were thinner and different motifs were used in the impressions chevrons cord marks and punctures made with animal bones Handles are sometimes added and the rims may turn in instead of out The blubber lamp was molded from a single piece of clay The use of such lamps suggests some household activity in the huts after dark Tool kit edit nbsp flake axe The flint industry evolved a high and unified standard with small and flake axes long lithic flakes knives and arrow heads However tools of many materials were in use wood prongs and points antler parts carved bone tools Art edit Paddles from Tybrind Vig show traces of highly developed and artistic woodcarving This is an example of the embellishment of functional pieces The population also polished and engraved non functional or not obviously functional pieces of bone or antler Motifs were predominantly geometric with some anthropomorphic or zoomorphic forms Also in evidence for example at Fano are polished amber representations of animals such as birds boars and bears Jewelry was made of animal teeth or decorative shells To what extent any of these pieces were symbolic of wealth and status is not clear Funerary customs edit nbsp A late Scandinavian Hunter Gatherer buried seated dated circa 7 000 BP from Skateholm near Trelleborg in southwest Sweden Reconstruction by Oscar Nilsson Trelleborgs Museum 6 7 Cemeteries such as the ones at Vedbaek and Skateholm give a sedentary character to the settlements Red ochre and deer antlers were placed in some graves but not others Some social distinctions may therefore have been made There was some appreciation of sexual dimorphism the women wore necklaces and belts of animal teeth and shells No special body position was used Both burial and cremation were practiced At Mollegabet an individual was buried in a dugout which some see as the beginning of Scandinavian boat burials Skateholm contained also a dog cemetery Dog graves were prepared and gifted the same as human with ochre antler and grave goods In either history or prehistory the dog is an invaluable animal and is often treated as a person See also editGoseck circle Nostvet and Lihult cultures Swifterbant culture Narva culture Kunda culture Scandinavian prehistory Mesolithic Prehistoric Europe Old Europe archaeology References edit Europe s First Farmers T Douglas Price University of Wisconsin Madison Cambridge University Press 2000 1 L P Louwe Kooijmans Trijntje van de Betuweroute Jachtkampen uit de Steentijd te Hardinxveld Giessendam 1998 Spiegel Historiael 33 blz 423 428 2 Archived 2007 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Villa P Cannibalism in the Neolithic Science 25 Jul 1986 Vol 233 Issue 4762 pp 431 437 DOI 10 1126 science 233 4762 431 DNA evidence from 63 animals at Ertebolle and other EBK sites reported in European hunter gatherers domesticated pigs earlier than thought Christian Science Monitor 27 August 2013 accessed 28 August 2013 Fredrik Hallgren The Introduction of Ceramic Technology Around the Baltic Sea in the 6th millennium in Helena Knutsson ed Coast to Coast Arrival Coast to Coast book 10 2004 pp 123 142 Detlef Gronenborn Beyond the models Neolithisation in Central Europe Proceedings of the British Academy vol 144 2007 p 87 Jutta Paulina de Roever The Pottery of Hunter Gatherers in Transition to Agriculture Illustrated by the Swifterbant Culture the Netherlands in Dragos Gheorghiu ed Early Farmers Late Foragers and Ceramic Traditions On the Beginning of Pottery in the Near East and Europe 2009 pp 150 166 This 7 000 year old woman was among Sweden s last hunter gatherers National Geographic Magazine 11 November 2019 Archived from the original on September 3 2022 Trelleborgs Museum exhibit www trelleborg se in Swedish 1 April 2022 External links editPhilippsen Bente Meadows John 2014 Inland Ertebolle Culture the importance of aquatic resources and the freshwater reservoir effect in radiocarbon dates from pottery food crusts Internet Archaeology 37 doi 10 11141 ia 37 9 Locations New Evidence on the Ertebolle Culture on Rugen Excavations on stone age sites on Rugen island and at Dabki in 2004 https web archive org web 20070515045839 http www uni greifswald de histor ufg aktuelles aktu mesoexcavations html Excavating submerged Stone Age sites in Denmark the Tybrind Vig example NEW INVESTIGATIONS ON SUBMARINE STONE AGE SITES IN THE WISMAR BAY AREA The Wadden Sea Region Economy Regionality and biotope exploitation in Danish Ertebolle and adjacent periods Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Prehistoric plant food of Denmark Art and artifacts An in situ fireplace Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ertebolle culture amp 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