Ekaterina Dolbunova’s research while affiliated with British Museum and other places

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Publications (88)


Fig. 1. Location of the Serteya I, II, X, Rudnya Serteya), Naumovo, Usviaty IV, and Dubokray V, VII sites.
Fig. 2. Distribution of bird skeletal elements at Serteya II, western section, 4 th millennium BC (a), eastern section, pile settlement (dwelling no. 3, second half of the 3 rd millennium BC) (b); and Usviaty IV (layer B) site (c).
Fig. 5. Flutes (Dubokray V site).
Fig. 6. Bone spatula with an image of a raven's head (1) and grouse (3) (Usviaty IV, layer B site), an image of a waterfowl (2) (settlement Serteya II, dwelling no. 3).
Fig. 7. Wooden paddle with the heads of ducks on the top of the handle (Usviaty IV site, layer B).

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Human and birds: Avifauna at hunter-gatherer sites of the 6th to 3rd millennia BC (Western Dvina Lakeland)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2023

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241 Reads

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1 Citation

Documenta Praehistorica

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andrey panteleev

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Ekaterina Dolbunova

The paper presents the study of avifauna from the hunter-gatherer sites at the Dnieper-Dvina basin spanning time period from the 6th to 3rd millennia BC. A total of 669 bird bones were identified and attributed to 46 different bird taxa, representing resident and migrant birds. They belong to four habitat groups: waterfowl, forest, woodside and meadow-steppe. The dominance of waterfowl birds follows the common strategy of aquatic resources exploitation. Changes in the procurement strategies, use and symbolic meanings of birds can be envisaged. Reconstructed regional mean temperature fluctuations suggest a particular influence on breeding biology and migration patterns of different species.

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The impact of farming on prehistoric culinary practices throughout Northern Europe

October 2023

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626 Reads

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10 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

To investigate changes in culinary practices associated with the arrival of farming, we analysed the organic residues of over 1,000 pottery vessels from hunter-gatherer-fisher and early agricultural sites across Northern Europe from the Lower Rhine Basin to the Northeastern Baltic. Here, pottery was widely used by hunter-gatherer-fishers prior to the introduction of domesticated animals and plants. Overall, there was surprising continuity in the way that hunter-gatherer-fishers and farmers used pottery. Both aquatic products and wild plants remained prevalent, a pattern repeated consistently across the study area. We argue that the rapid adaptation of farming communities to exploit coastal and lagoonal resources facilitated their northerly expansion, and in some cases, hunting, gathering, and fishing became the most dominant subsistence strategy. Nevertheless, dairy products frequently appear in pottery associated with the earliest farming groups often mixed with wild plants and fish. Interestingly, we also find compelling evidence of dairy products in hunter-gatherer-fisher Ertebølle pottery, which predates the arrival of domesticated animals. We propose that Ertebølle hunter-gatherer-fishers frequently acquired dairy products through exchange with adjacent farming communities prior to the transition. The continuity observed in pottery use across the transition to farming contrasts with the analysis of human remains which shows substantial demographic change through ancient DNA and, in some cases, a reduction in marine consumption through stable isotope analysis. We postulate that farmers acquired the knowledge and skills they needed to succeed from local hunter-gatherer-fishers but without substantial admixture.


Fig. 1. Site Cherkasskaya-5. 1 -location of the site on the map of the Don basin; 2 -chalk sinker; 3-5 -ceramics with incised and pricked ornamentation.
Early Neolithic of the Middle Don in the Light of Current Research (based on materials from the Cherkasskaya-5 site)

September 2023

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58 Reads

Povolzhskaya Arkheologiya (The Volga River Region Archaeology)

The article deals with the latest overview of the Early Neolithic site Cherkasskaya-5, located in the Middle Don, southern part of the forest-steppe zone, Voronezh Oblast. The site is characterized by particular preservation of organic remains and a range of materials available for dating, which is rare for sites of the Don forest-steppe area. The first radiocarbon dates, along with particular early Neolithic flint assemblage, allowed attributing the complex to the early Neolithic. First archaeozoological analysis suggested the presence of bones of domesticated species. However recent re-examination of the faunal collection did not allow identifying any domesticated species. New AMS-radiocarbon dates made on organic crust and animal bones confirmed the Early Neolithic age of the site. Direct dating of the organic wrapping of a Cretaceous sinker allowed refining the age of the early Neolithic period to the first quarter of the 6th mill BC. Excavations conducted in 2014–2015 allowed obtaining a ceramic collection, which does not have any analogies within the surrounding Neolithic sites of the Middle and Upper Don region, and finds more similarities with Lower Volga ceramic tradition. It allows us to put a new glance at the process of Neolithisation of the region.



Fig. 1. Earliest ceramic complexes in the Circum-Baltic space (Ertebølle, Narva, Neman culture, Dąbki site), sites with Narva culture materials in the eastern part and Dnieper-Dvina basin (based on the data from Courel et al. 2020; Kotula et al. 2015; Hartz, Lübke 2006; Povlsen 2013; Tkachou 2018; Wawrusiewicz et al. 2017).
Fig. 9. Early Neolithic bone industry: 1-2 Serteya II; 3, 7-9, 10 Rudnya Serteyskaya; 4, 5, 6 Serteya X.
The End of the Earliest Ceramic Traditions: Dnieper-Dvina Region Became Part of the Circum-Baltic Space at the Turn of the 6th to 5th Millennium BC

December 2022

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351 Reads

Documenta Praehistorica

The Dnieper-Dvina area is one of the regions in Eastern Europe which was part of a wider network of the earliest ceramic traditions, spread in the first half to the middle of the 6th millennium BC. After the collapse of this network new ceramic complexes appeared here, called the Rudnya culture, and at the end of the 6th millennium BC this manifested in changes in the directions of cultural connections. This region became part of the cultural space of the Circum-Baltic area. Several complexes within the Rudnya culture originated in different groups of Narva pottery, and are dated to c. 5400–4400 cal BC.


The transmission of pottery technology among prehistoric European hunter-gatherers

December 2022

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1,229 Reads

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32 Citations

Nature Human Behaviour

Human history has been shaped by global dispersals of technologies, although understanding of what enabled these processes is limited. Here, we explore the behavioural mechanisms that led to the emergence of pottery among hunter-gatherer communities in Europe during the mid-Holocene. Through radiocarbon dating, we propose this dispersal occurred at a far faster rate than previously thought. Chemical characterization of organic residues shows that European hunter-gatherer pottery had a function structured around regional culinary practices rather than environmental factors. Analysis of the forms, decoration and technological choices suggests that knowledge of pottery spread through a process of cultural transmission. We demonstrate a correlation between the physical properties of pots and how they were used, reflecting social traditions inherited by successive generations of hunter-gatherers. Taken together the evidence supports kinship-driven, super-regional communication networks that existed long before other major innovations such as agriculture, writing, urbanism or metallurgy.


Citations (33)


... Lipid analysis of foodcrusts has considerably improved our understanding of ancient diet and particularly of marine resource utilisation. While frequently applied to ceramics themselves, lipid analysis has also been applied to foodcrusts to detect food and vessel use in assemblages across a vast geography spanning Europe and northern Asia [27,[32][33][34][35][36][37][38], East Asia [28,[39][40][41][42][43] and the Americas [25,44], and to select samples that do not contain aquatic resources for use in carbon dating, which are thus unhindered by the reservoir effect [26]. The formation of foodcrusts is a topic of ongoing research. ...

Reference:

The impact of cooking and burial on proteins: a characterisation of experimental foodcrusts and ceramics
The impact of farming on prehistoric culinary practices throughout Northern Europe

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... The signs of agriculture in pollen spectra for the hemiboreal forest region of the Eastern Europe have been noted since the Neolithic and Bronze Age (5000-4000 BP) [67][68][69][70][71][72][73][74]. In the Early Iron Age, palynological indicators of farming occurred more frequently and became more stable. ...

A deep history within a small wetland: 13 000 years of human-environment relations on the East European Plain

Antiquity

... The formation of foodcrusts is a topic of ongoing research. They are often presumed to be formed by cooking food, although they can also result from the use of fuel for illumination [45] or the production of sealants, moisturisers, adhesives or glues [26,46,47]. A possible correlation exists between foodcrust formation and the processing of aquatic resources, or alternatively these particular lipids may preserve better in foodcrusts than ceramics [27]. ...

Light Production by Ceramic Using Hunter-Gatherer-Fishers of the Circum-Baltic

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society

... Conversely, training sets for chironomid-based temperature reconstruction have been developed in various areas of Europe, and recently the Swiss-Norwegian, and Polish training sets have merged to encompass broader latitudinal and altitudinal ranges. Given the comprehensive nature of the existing Swiss-Norwegian -Polish training set, the transfer function (SNP TS) derived from these data has been widely adopted in regions lacking local chironomid temperature training sets and transfer functions (e.g., Luoto et al., 2019;Płóciennik et al., 2022). Yet, certain limitations must be considered when applying inference models beyond the geographical or environmental range of the training set. ...

Summer temperature drives the lake ecosystem during the Late Weichselian and Holocene in Eastern Europe: A case study from East European Plain
  • Citing Article
  • July 2022

CATENA

... UNESCO has recognized 111 sites with remains of these Neolithic pile dwellings located around the Alps of Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Slovenia, and Switzerland (Ruttkay et al. 2004;ICG Palafittes 2009;Çufar 2010;Hafner et al. 2014;Billamboz 2014), with additional sites in 4 Mendoza et al. International Journal of Wood Culture (2022) 1-36 Russia (Dolukhanov & Miklyayev 1986;Mazurkevich et al. 2010) and Belarus (Pranckenaite et al. 2021). These pile dwellings were located on rivers, lakes, and wetland shores and were important sites for agricultural communities from 5000 to 500 BC (UNESCO 2022). ...

Pile Dwellings in the Circum-Baltic Area

Documenta Praehistorica

... Моделирование универсальных тенденций, которые сложно выявить в археологическом материале, их поиск заслонил масштабы регионального разнообразия и специфику местного развития (Whittle, 2018). При моделировании распространения традиций важно говорить о совпадении не отдельных черт, но определенного пакета в рамках близких хронологических периодов, иначе аналогии могут быть слишком общими и широкими хронологически и географически. ...

The palaeoenvironment and settlement history of a lakeshore setting: An interdisciplinary study from the multi-layered archaeological site of Serteya II, Western Russia
  • Citing Article
  • October 2021

Journal of Archaeological Science Reports

... Today, records of these activities can be reconstructed using palaeoecological methods from natural archives, such as lacustrine sediments (e.g. Mroczkowska et al., 2021;Słowiński et al., 2021) and soils (e.g. Bednarek and Markiewicz, 2006). ...

Small peatland with a big story: 600-year paleoecological and historical data from a kettle-hole peatland in Western Russia

... Foodcrust, sometimes referred to as 'carbonised residue' and 'char' is broadly defined as 'amorphous charred or burnt deposits adhering to the surface of containers associated with heating organic matter' [26]. The prevalence of foodcrusts varies considerably; however, they are particularly abundant in Mesolithic and Neolithic contexts in northern Europe and Eurasia where they are sometimes found on the majority of ceramics within assemblages [27,28]. Examples of archaeological foodcrusts can be viewed in fig. 2 in [29], fig. 1 in [30] and fig. 3 in [31]. ...

The use of early pottery by hunter-gatherers of the Eastern European forest-steppe

Quaternary Science Reviews

... Lipid analysis of foodcrusts has considerably improved our understanding of ancient diet and particularly of marine resource utilisation. While frequently applied to ceramics themselves, lipid analysis has also been applied to foodcrusts to detect food and vessel use in assemblages across a vast geography spanning Europe and northern Asia [27,[32][33][34][35][36][37][38], East Asia [28,[39][40][41][42][43] and the Americas [25,44], and to select samples that do not contain aquatic resources for use in carbon dating, which are thus unhindered by the reservoir effect [26]. The formation of foodcrusts is a topic of ongoing research. ...

Neolithic farmers or Neolithic foragers? Organic residue analysis of early pottery from Rakushechny Yar on the Lower Don (Russia)