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Deux millénaires d'occupations mésolithiques aux bords de l'Escaut à Kerkhove (Belgique) : première approche palethnographique

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Ondertitel:Two millennia of Mesolithic occupations on the river Scheldt at Kerkhove (Belgium) : a first palethnographic approach
17 Mesolithic artefact loci were discovered on an alluvial levee during recent excavations at the wetland site of Kerkhove, located in the Scheldt floodplain at about 20 km from the French border. On typochronological grounds, these artefact loci are mainly dated to the Early Mesolithic, already well known from previous large-scale excavations in the lower Scheldt basin, but also to the lesser known Middle and Late Mesolithic periods. The first occupation phase proved to be the most intense and lasted from the middle of the 11th to the middle of the 10th millennium cal BP, based on a series of 19 14C-dates on single entity charred hazelnut shells. At least 9 different artefact loci belonging to this period were documented, covering either small (< 40 m(2)) or rather large areas (> 100 m(2)). The microlith compositions of most of these clusters were dominated by triangles and points with retouched base, corresponding to the regional assemblage type of the "Chinru group". The second occupation phase, the Middle Mesolithic, was harder to define spatially, due to its location on the western edge of the excavation area and to its partial admixture with Early Mesolithic artefacts at specific locations. Nevertheless, three distinct artefact loci were discovered, characterised by the presence of numerous small backed bladelets combined with occasional points with invasive retouch on the one hand and by a different exploitation of lithic raw material resources on the other hand. Besides these more traditional clusters, several discrete concentrations of armatures were located in the low-density areas to the west of the most important Middle Mesolithic occupation zone. Unfortunately, this Middle Mesolithic occupational phase could not be directly dated by ecofacts associated with the artefact loci. However, two dates on unburnt faunal remains recovered from the colluvial deposits on the slope of the levee, indicate that this Middle Mesolithic occupation could date to as early as the second part of the 10th millennium cal BP, at the very beginning of the Middle Mesolithic period. Finally, the last occupation of the site dates to the Late Mesolithic and is only represented by one artefact locus, that contained regular Wommersom quartzite and flint bladelets associated with a few trapezes. Unfortunately, no absolute dates were obtained for this cluster to corroborate and specify its chronological position. This being said, the Kerkhove site offers the advantage, compared to previously excavated sites, that it allows us to study evolutions in lithic typology, lithic technology, tool-uses and the exploitation of lithic raw materials and other types of natural resources from a multi-period perspective. Indeed, besides lithics, considerable amounts of carbonized hazelnut shells and faunal remains were recovered, the latter consisting not only of heavily burnt bone fragments but also numerous unburnt remains. This particular feature of the site is unprecedented within the Early to Late Mesolithic of northern Belgium and allows us for the first time to reconstruct the subsistence behaviour of the Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of the Scheldt basin. Furthermore, the detailed excavation methodology applied, allows for a high-resolution intra-site analysis including not only the spatially well-defined artefact loci but also the areas in between, characterized by the occurrence of small and a low-density artefact clusters. The most interesting preliminary results consist of the striking differences between the distinct occupations phases of the sites on several levels, from the general layout and spatial organisation, over site-function, raw material procurement to the exploitation of animal and plant resources. These differences are particularly outspoken when comparing the Early and Middle Mesolithic occupation of the site. The Early Mesolithic occupation appears homogeneous and is mainly characterised by the use of Scheldt flint, the systematic presence of carbonised hazelnut shells, the almost systematic presence of hearths in the clusters and the functional organisation of space, that doesn't show contrasts between the individual clusters. Moreover, medium-sized mammals like wild boar and roe deer dominate these assemblages and they are to a lesser extent accompanied by fur-animals such as pine marten. By contrast, the layout and the general use of space of the Middle Mesolithic occupation seems to diverge completely from this picture. From this time onwards, Wommersom quartzite is imported and the use of the Scheldt flint is largely abandoned in favour of a grey-brown translucent and more fine-grained flint, probably indicating a change in the social territorial boundaries of the groups occupying the site of Kerkhove. Besides this, from a functional point of view, the clusters clearly contrast with one another and seem to form special activity areas, although it remains to be proven whether they are complementary special activity areas from one and the same larger campsite or if they are non-contemporaneous, individually functioning clusters. Furthermore, hearth features and carbonised hazelnut shells are completely absent from these artefact loci. Finally, in addition to the exploitation of wild boar, roe deer, red deer and fur animals, from the Middle Mesolithic onwards, we have indications for the consumption of freshwater fish at the site, in the form of burnt fish remains associated with the aforementioned discrete armature clusters.
Tijdschrift: BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE PREHISTORIQUE FRANCAISE
ISSN: 1760-7361
Issue: 2
Volume: 116
Pagina's: 283 - 316
Jaar van publicatie:2019
Toegankelijkheid:Closed