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The Gravettian and the Epigravettian chronology in eastern central Europe: A comment on Bösken et al. (2017) ⁎
György Lengyel , Jarosław Wilczyński Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Sławkowska 17, 31-016 Krakow, Poland
A R T I C L E I N F O
A B S T R A C T
Keywords: Upper Palaeolithic Last Glacial Maximum Lithic tool typology
Bösken et al. (2017) aimed at contributing to the environmental variability of the Gravettian population in ‘southeastern’ Europe during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) with an interdisciplinary study at the Upper Palaeolithic site Ságvár Lyukas Hill (Hungary). However, the classification of the site as Gravettian is erroneous because the LGM archaeological record of eastern central Europe is composed of findings of another culture, the Epigravettian. This short comment on the paper of Bösken et al. (2017) presents the archaeological chronology between 34 and 16 kyr BP with a focus on the Gravettian–Epigravettian dichotomy.
Bösken et al. (2017) published the results of the detailed geological and malacological investigations of the Upper Palaeolithic site Ságvár Lyukas Hill in western Hungary, dated to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) (Lengyel 2008–2009, 2010). Besides the specific aims of their paper, the results are an important contribution to reconstructions of the palaeoenvironment of hunter-gatherer societies during the LGM in the Carpathian Basin. While the natural science results in Bösken et al. (2017) are soundly presented, the archaeological classification of the site is misunderstood and thus the consequent implications to archaeological research are inaccurate. Bösken et al. (2017: 4) state that Ságvár Lyukas Hill is a Gravettian site and represents one of few dated to the LGM in southeastern Europe. However, the archaeological literature directly contradicts this statement; there are no Gravettian sites dated to the LGM in this region (Kozłowski, 2007; Svoboda, 2007), which is often mentioned as central Europe, or eastern central Europe (ECE – roughly the Western Carpathians and the Carpathian Basin) (e.g. Verpoorte, 2004). The last Gravettian hunter-gatherer camps in the chronology of the Upper Palaeolithic in ECE predate 24 kyr BP, which is the time of the greatest extent of the Fennoscandian ice sheet (FIS) (Marks, 2012; Stroeven et al., 2015). The Upper Palaeolithic human record in ECE consists of three ar-
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chaeological cultures representing three hunter-gatherer populations: Gravettian ~34–24 kyr BP, Epigravettian ~24–16 kyr BP, and Magdalénian ~18–13 kyr BP (Maier, 2015; Svoboda, 2007). The Gravettian archaeological record is further classified into three sequential clusters. The earliest is the Early Gravettian, dated to ~34–30 kyr BP (Moreau, 2009). The next is the Pavlovian, dated to ~31–28 kyr BP (Svoboda, 2016). The last member of the Gravettian culture is the Late Gravettian, also called Willendorf–Kostenkian or shouldered points horizon (Grigorev, 1993; Kozłowski, 1996a; Svoboda, 2007), which occupied ECE between ~28–24 kyr BP (Wilczyński, 2016). At the onset of the maximal extent of the FIS, ~24 kyr BP, there is a significant change in the archaeological record, and the sites dated to between ~ 24 and 16 kyr BP are classified into another culture, the Epigravettian (Dobosi, 2004; Kaminská, 2016; Kozłowski, 1996b; Svoboda and Novák, 2004). The Epigravettian also can be divided into two chronological phases (Anghelinu et al., 2012; Cârcimaru et al. 2007–2008; Dobosi, 2004; Lengyel, 2014a; Svoboda and Novák, 2004). The early phase is contemporaneous with the FIS maximum extent roughly between 24 and 20 kyr BP, and the later phase dates to the time of FIS retreat. While Epigravettian sites are documented all over ECE, the third hunter-gatherer culture of this re-
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
[email protected] (G. Lengyel).
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.11.017 Received 14 September 2017; Accepted 4 November 2017 0031-0182/ © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Please cite this article as: Lengyel, G., Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (2017), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.11.017
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Fig. 1. Mean ranges of calibrated radiocarbon dates of Late Gravettian and Epigravettian sites and layers of the Western Carpathians and the Middle Danube basin, calibrated using OxCal (Reimer et al., 2013), showing 95.4% probability (after: Antl–Weiser et al., 2010; Demidenko et al., 2017; Haesaerts et al., 1996, 2016; Kaminská, 2016; Lengyel 2008–2009; Oliva, 2009; Svoboda, 1991, 2008; Škrdla et al., 2016; Verpoorte, 2002; Vlačiky et al., 2013; Wilczyński, 2009; Wilczyński et al., 2012, 2015).
Gravettian in ECE, as we know today, is that Gravettian lithic hunting weapon tool types are absent in Epigravettian, such as the shouldered point, microgravette or Gravette point, Late Gravettian rectangle (ventrally bi-truncated and backed or steeply retouched bladelet), fléchette, and the bifacial leaf point (Fig. 3) (Kozłowski, 2013; Lengyel et al., 2016; Wilczyński, 2016). The Epigravettian during the FIS maximum has a low proportion of lithic armatures, which most often are simple backed bladelets (Lengyel, 2014a; Maier, 2015). However, after FIS started retreating, the later Epigravettian lithic inventories were again abundant in armatures, but without the style of the Gravettian weaponry (Lengyel, 2014a). The lithic assemblage of Ságvár entirely lacks the Gravettian armature types and has a decreased frequency of armature compared to the previous periods (Lengyel, 2014b). Only backed bladelets and retouched points were found in the armature. In the Hungarian Upper Palaeolithic chronology the “Gravettian
gion, the Magdalénian, arrived from western Europe, left abundant occupational remains only north of the Carpathians, and a few sites in Moravia, and none in the Carpathian Basin (Maier, 2015). The Magdalénian seems to have been partly coeval with the later Epigravettian phase. To support that Gravettian sites are not dated to the maximum extent of FIS, Fig. 1 presents calibrated radiocarbon dates from ECE. These derive from a database which includes only those dates with standard deviation less than 600 radiocarbon years. Fig. 1 shows the mean values of OxCal calibrated radiocarbon dates (Reimer et al., 2013) by layers of sites, and indicates the 95.4% probability. The sole overlap involves Mogyorósbánya (Hungary) and the lower layer of Kašov (Slovakia) (for site location see Fig. 2), at 100 years. Fig. 1 thus shows that the latest Gravettian occupations are not associated with the peak of the LGM, which in turn is highly correlated with the Epigravettian. The striking difference between the Epigravettian and the
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Fig. 2. Map showing the sites radiocarbon dated. 1: Grub–Kranawetberg, 2: Willendorf II, 3: Milovice, 4: Moravany–Žakovska, Moravany–Lopata II, Banka-Horné fraské role, 5: Kraków–Spadzista, 6: Cejkov I, Kašov, 7: Trenčianske Bohuslavice, 8: Jaksice II, 9: Petřkovice, 10: Mogyorósbánya, 11: Grubgraben, 12: Ságvár, 13: Madaras, 14: Stránská Skála IV, Brno–Štýřice III, 15: Mohelno–Plevovce, 16: Esztergom, 17: Targowisko 10, 18: Nadap.
human settlement at Ságvár was established under interstadial phases and mild climate (Gábori–Csánk, V., 1978; Sümegi et al., 1998). The results of Bösken et al. (2017) now presented sound evidence for cold glacial environment. However, because they did not bring new data to support the Gravettian classification of the site Ságvár, all of their achievements regarding human palaeoenvironment are relevant to the Epigravettian instead of the Gravettian. We think the classification scheme of GEM misled them to form this conclusion. Nevertheless, a thorougher reading of the archaeological literature would have helped them avoid this misunderstanding.
Entity Model” (GEM) (Dobosi, 2000) has been used to classify archaeological assemblages between 32 and 15 kyr BP. GEM can be misleading in the view of ECE research because it uses the term Gravettian for chronologically and culturally different hunter-gatherer populations, suggesting they are lineally related. However, even GEM distinguished Ságvár and the similar lithic industries from the chronologically earlier and later ones with sound archaeological data (Dobosi, 2000, 2004, 2016). This difference was enough significant to separate Ságvár and further Hungarian sites similar to Ságvár in a new group of the Epigravettian era of ECE, called Ságvárian, which was specific to the inner Carpathian basin (Kozłowski, 1979; Tolnai–Dobosi, V., 2001). The name Ságvárian recently was proposed to be eliminated, and Ságvár was classified Early Epigravettian (Lengyel, 2016). Bösken et al. (2017) concluded that Ságvár was occupied during a typical cold LGM climate. The revision of GEM's radiocarbon ages and the archaeological evidence of Ságvár also suggested cold environmental conditions for the human occupation (Lengyel 2008–2009, 2009, 2010, 2014b) instead of what had long been claimed, that the
Acknowledgments G. L. was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, agreement No. UMO-2016/23/P/HS3/04034. J. W. was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, agreement No. UMO-2015/18/E/ HS3/00178.
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Fig. 3. Armatures from the Late Gravettian (1–9), Epigravettian of LGM (10 −21), and the Epigravettian of post LGM (22–29). Jaksice II: 1–5; Kraków–Spadzista: 6–8; Trenčianske Bohuslavice: 9; Ságvár: 10–21; Nadap: 22, 23; Esztergom: 24–27; Targowisko 10: 28, 29. Fléchette: 1, 2; Backed ventrally truncated bladelet: 4, 5; Backed–truncated bladelet: 3; Gravette point: 6; Microgravette point: 7; Bifacial leaf point: 9; Shouldered point: 8; Abruptly retouched bladelet: 10, 21; Backed bladelet: 11–20. Curved backed point: 22, 24, 26–29; Arched backed point: 25; Backed point: 23 (composed from Kaminská, 2016: Fig. 7; Lengyel, 2016: Fig. 3, Wilczyński, 2009: Fig. 7; Wilczyński, 2015: Fig. 20; Wilczyński et al., 2015: Fig. 9).
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