Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia

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Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia. / Iversen, Rune.

In: Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, Vol. 44, 12.2016, p. 69-86.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Iversen, R 2016, 'Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia', Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, vol. 44, pp. 69-86.

APA

Iversen, R. (2016). Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 44, 69-86.

Vancouver

Iversen R. Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2016 Dec;44:69-86.

Author

Iversen, Rune. / Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia. In: Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 2016 ; Vol. 44. pp. 69-86.

Bibtex

@article{c69b778660a04b2caf69fd9ee8397ef7,
title = "Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia",
abstract = "The three main types of tanged flint arrowheads (A, B, and C) characteristic of the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunter, fisher and gatherers of southwestern Scandinavia are traditionally viewed as chronological conditioned. However, recent studies have shown their simultaneity during the early 3rd millennium BC. Based on a study of more than 1500 arrowheads from Denmark and western Sweden, this paper explains the stylistic variation of the Pitted Ware arrowheads as functional determined representing two main categories: relatively short and wide hunting arrowheads (type A) and long and slender war arrowheads (type C). Type B represents a multifunctional group of arrowheads that mixes features from type A and C. Furthermore, diverging production schemes (schema op{\'e}ratoire) used for the shaping of hunting arrowheads has helped to identify social groupings within the larger southwestern Scandinavian Pitted Ware complex and contact across the Kattegat during the Middle Neolithic.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Middle Neolithic, Pitted Ware culture, Arrowheads, Stylistic variation, Lithic technology, Schema op{\'e}ratoire, Southwestern Scandinavia, Cultural contacts, Group identity, Neolithic warfare",
author = "Rune Iversen",
year = "2016",
month = dec,
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "69--86",
journal = "Journal of Anthropological Archaeology",
issn = "0278-4165",
publisher = "Academic Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Arrowheads as indicators of interpersonal violence and group identity among the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunters of southwestern Scandinavia

AU - Iversen, Rune

PY - 2016/12

Y1 - 2016/12

N2 - The three main types of tanged flint arrowheads (A, B, and C) characteristic of the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunter, fisher and gatherers of southwestern Scandinavia are traditionally viewed as chronological conditioned. However, recent studies have shown their simultaneity during the early 3rd millennium BC. Based on a study of more than 1500 arrowheads from Denmark and western Sweden, this paper explains the stylistic variation of the Pitted Ware arrowheads as functional determined representing two main categories: relatively short and wide hunting arrowheads (type A) and long and slender war arrowheads (type C). Type B represents a multifunctional group of arrowheads that mixes features from type A and C. Furthermore, diverging production schemes (schema opératoire) used for the shaping of hunting arrowheads has helped to identify social groupings within the larger southwestern Scandinavian Pitted Ware complex and contact across the Kattegat during the Middle Neolithic.

AB - The three main types of tanged flint arrowheads (A, B, and C) characteristic of the Neolithic Pitted Ware hunter, fisher and gatherers of southwestern Scandinavia are traditionally viewed as chronological conditioned. However, recent studies have shown their simultaneity during the early 3rd millennium BC. Based on a study of more than 1500 arrowheads from Denmark and western Sweden, this paper explains the stylistic variation of the Pitted Ware arrowheads as functional determined representing two main categories: relatively short and wide hunting arrowheads (type A) and long and slender war arrowheads (type C). Type B represents a multifunctional group of arrowheads that mixes features from type A and C. Furthermore, diverging production schemes (schema opératoire) used for the shaping of hunting arrowheads has helped to identify social groupings within the larger southwestern Scandinavian Pitted Ware complex and contact across the Kattegat during the Middle Neolithic.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Middle Neolithic

KW - Pitted Ware culture

KW - Arrowheads

KW - Stylistic variation

KW - Lithic technology

KW - Schema opératoire

KW - Southwestern Scandinavia

KW - Cultural contacts

KW - Group identity

KW - Neolithic warfare

UR - http://authors.elsevier.com/a/1TngZ-JVbZS8c

M3 - Journal article

VL - 44

SP - 69

EP - 86

JO - Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

JF - Journal of Anthropological Archaeology

SN - 0278-4165

ER -

ID: 166475936