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Pre-Pottery Neolithic

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Neolithic Historical Epoch
Mesolithic

Pre-Pottery Neolithic A

Pre-Pottery Neolithic B

Pottery Neolithic

Levant
Tell Halaf
Ubaid period
Europe
Linear Pottery
Vinča culture
Varna culture
Vučedol culture
Malta Temples
China
South Asia
Mehrgarh
Americas

Chalcolithic

Uruk period
Pit Grave culture
Corded Ware
Europe
Mesoamerica

farming, animal husbandry
pottery, metallurgy, wheel
circular ditches, henges, megaliths
Neolithic religion

Bronze Age

The Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN, around 9000 to 6000 BCE) represents the early Neolithic in the Levantine and upper Mesopotamian region of the Fertile Crescent. It succeeds the Natufian culture of the Epipaleolithic (Mesolithic) as the domestication of plants and animals was in its beginnings and triggered by the Younger Dryas. The Pre-Pottery Neolithic culture came to an end around the time of the 8.2 kiloyear event, a cool spell lasting several hundred years centred around 6200 BCE.

The Pre-Pottery Neolithic is divided into Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) and the following Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB). These were originally defined by Kathleen Kenyon in the type site of Jericho (Palestine). During this time, pottery was yet unknown in the Fertile Crescent (although it did exist already elsewhere such as Japan and China). The Pre-Pottery Neolithic precedes the ceramic Neolithic (Yarmukian). At 'Ain Ghazal in Jordan the culture continued a few more centuries as the so-called Pre-Pottery Neolithic C culture.

Around 8,000 BCE during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) the world's first town Jericho appeared in the Levant.

PPNB differed from PPNA in showing greater use of domesticated animals, a different set of tools, and new architectural styles. See the articles on PPNA and PPNB for more information.

Work at the site of 'Ain Ghazal in Jordan has indicated a later Pre-Pottery Neolithic C period. Juris Zarins has proposed that a Circum Arabian Nomadic Pastoral Complex developed in the period from the climatic crisis of 6,200 BCE, partly as a result of an increasing emphasis in PPNB cultures upon animal domesticates, and a fusion with Harifian hunter gatherers in Southern Palestine, with affiliate connections with the cultures of Fayyum and the Eastern Desert of Egypt. Cultures practicing this lifestyle spread down the Red Sea shoreline and moved east from Syria into Southern Iraq. [1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Zarins, Juris (1992) "Pastoral Nomadism in Arabia: Ethnoarchaeology and the Archaeological Record," in Ofer Bar-Yosef and A. Khazanov, eds. "Pastoralism in the Levant"

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Ofer Bar-Yosef, The PPNA in the Levant – an overview. Paléorient 15/1, 1989, 57-63.
  • J. Cauvin, Naissance des divinités, Naissance de l’agriculture. La révolution des symboles au Néolithique (CNRS 1994). Translation (T. Watkins) The birth of the gods and the origins of agriculture (Cambridge 2000).
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