Ornamented artefact may indicate long distance exchange between Mesolithic communities


An ornamented bâton percé found in Central Poland may provide evidence of exchange between Mesolithic communities, according to a study published in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Grzegorz Osipowicz from Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland, and colleagues.

Ornamented artefact may indicate long-distance exchange between Mesolithic communities
Ornamented bâton percé [Credit: Osipowicz et al. (2017)]
Artefacts and raw materials can provide insight into how Prehistoric communities exchanged gifts, such as stone transported for its technological significance, or metal products adorning graves. Recently, researchers found an ornamented bâton percé carved from antler of unknown origin in the Gołębiewo site in Central Poland.

To investigate the antler source species and its geographic origin, the researchers conducted DNA and stable isotope analyses of the artefact. The source material was identified as antler from a reindeer species which dispersion analysis revealed to have a range limited to northern Scandinavia and north-western Russia during the Early-Holocene. This may suggest that the artefact was transported from North Karelia to Central Poland.

Ornamented artefact may indicate long-distance exchange between Mesolithic communities
Location of Gołębiewo 47 site and other finds of ornamented and zoomorphic bâtons percés in Europe: 1. Ornamented 
bâtons percés from the Boreal period and the Boreal/Atlantic transition, 2. Ornamented bâtons percés from the 
Atlantic period, 3. Ornamented bâtons percés from Gołębiewo; 4. Artefacts stylised on the elk's head; 
5. Artefacts ornamented with hatched triangles [Credit: Osipowicz et al. (2017)]
The reasons why this artifact was transported are subject to speculation, but the authors suggest that their results are possible evidence for the flow of goods between hunter-gatherer groups at a large distance. This study provides new insight into how ideas and items were exchanged in Mesolithic communities within North Eastern Europe.

"The route taken for transporting the Rangifer tarandus antler from nearby North Karelia to Central Poland, and the motive for transporting it, remain impossible to determine conclusively," says Osipowicz. "However, the obtained results are the first direct evidence for the flow of goods between hunter-gatherer groups in the Early Holocene at such a great distance."

Source: PLOS [October 04, 2017]