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Archaeo-faunal aspects of bog finds from Hassleberga, southern Scania, Sweden

Larsson, Lars LU ; Liljegren, Ronnie LU ; Magnell, Ola LU and Ekstrom, Jonas (2002) Symposium on the Final Palaeolithic of the Great European Plain 39. p.61-74
Abstract
In recent years, small bogs at Hassleberga in southwestern Scania have been turned into crayfish ponds after the removal of the organic sediments. Bones and antlers were noticed in the excavated material and have been systematically collected. The finds include reindeer of both sexes and of different ages. Bones of wild horse, elk, arctic hare and arctic fox were also identified. Radiometric dating shows that the bones from these species were accumulated in the small bogs during the period from late Allerod to late Younger Dryas. It is of special interest that modifications interpreted as being caused by humans have been identified on bones from reindeer and horse. In contrast, artefact finds from any Late Palaeolithic settlement appear to... (More)
In recent years, small bogs at Hassleberga in southwestern Scania have been turned into crayfish ponds after the removal of the organic sediments. Bones and antlers were noticed in the excavated material and have been systematically collected. The finds include reindeer of both sexes and of different ages. Bones of wild horse, elk, arctic hare and arctic fox were also identified. Radiometric dating shows that the bones from these species were accumulated in the small bogs during the period from late Allerod to late Younger Dryas. It is of special interest that modifications interpreted as being caused by humans have been identified on bones from reindeer and horse. In contrast, artefact finds from any Late Palaeolithic settlement appear to be limited. Among the finds there is a piece of worked reindeer antler. A small number of flint artefacts show the characteristics of Late Palaeolithic tools. The finds at Hassleberga might provide evidence for a very special type of kill site used during the winter. When the ice melted in spring, the remains sank down to the bottom of the kettle holes. The location of Hassleberga gives us a hint of the landscape and its use by man during the Late Palaeolithic. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Recent studies in the Final Palaeolithic of the European plain
volume
39
pages
61 - 74
publisher
Jutland Archaelogical Society
conference name
Symposium on the Final Palaeolithic of the Great European Plain
conference location
Stockholm, Sweden
conference dates
1999-10-14 - 1999-10-17
external identifiers
  • wos:000182402400006
ISSN
0107-2854
ISBN
9788788415124
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7812ad92-ccc3-44a3-901e-b93ef805f6c8 (old id 1406976)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:43:39
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:36:00
@inproceedings{7812ad92-ccc3-44a3-901e-b93ef805f6c8,
  abstract     = {{In recent years, small bogs at Hassleberga in southwestern Scania have been turned into crayfish ponds after the removal of the organic sediments. Bones and antlers were noticed in the excavated material and have been systematically collected. The finds include reindeer of both sexes and of different ages. Bones of wild horse, elk, arctic hare and arctic fox were also identified. Radiometric dating shows that the bones from these species were accumulated in the small bogs during the period from late Allerod to late Younger Dryas. It is of special interest that modifications interpreted as being caused by humans have been identified on bones from reindeer and horse. In contrast, artefact finds from any Late Palaeolithic settlement appear to be limited. Among the finds there is a piece of worked reindeer antler. A small number of flint artefacts show the characteristics of Late Palaeolithic tools. The finds at Hassleberga might provide evidence for a very special type of kill site used during the winter. When the ice melted in spring, the remains sank down to the bottom of the kettle holes. The location of Hassleberga gives us a hint of the landscape and its use by man during the Late Palaeolithic.}},
  author       = {{Larsson, Lars and Liljegren, Ronnie and Magnell, Ola and Ekstrom, Jonas}},
  booktitle    = {{Recent studies in the Final Palaeolithic of the European plain}},
  isbn         = {{9788788415124}},
  issn         = {{0107-2854}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{61--74}},
  publisher    = {{Jutland Archaelogical Society}},
  title        = {{Archaeo-faunal aspects of bog finds from Hassleberga, southern Scania, Sweden}},
  volume       = {{39}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}