Standard

Early occupation of High Asia : New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains. / Fedorchenko, Alexander Yu; Taylor, William T.T.; Sayfulloev, Nuriddin N. et al.

In: Quaternary International, Vol. 559, 10.09.2020, p. 174-187.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Fedorchenko, AY, Taylor, WTT, Sayfulloev, NN, Brown, S, Rendu, W, Krivoshapkin, AI, Douka, K & Shnaider, SV 2020, 'Early occupation of High Asia: New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains', Quaternary International, vol. 559, pp. 174-187. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026

APA

Fedorchenko, A. Y., Taylor, W. T. T., Sayfulloev, N. N., Brown, S., Rendu, W., Krivoshapkin, A. I., Douka, K., & Shnaider, S. V. (2020). Early occupation of High Asia: New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains. Quaternary International, 559, 174-187. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026

Vancouver

Fedorchenko AY, Taylor WTT, Sayfulloev NN, Brown S, Rendu W, Krivoshapkin AI et al. Early occupation of High Asia: New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains. Quaternary International. 2020 Sept 10;559:174-187. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026

Author

Fedorchenko, Alexander Yu ; Taylor, William T.T. ; Sayfulloev, Nuriddin N. et al. / Early occupation of High Asia : New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains. In: Quaternary International. 2020 ; Vol. 559. pp. 174-187.

BibTeX

@article{6869ab663e0f4a4c92a11120065c4bb0,
title = "Early occupation of High Asia: New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains",
abstract = "The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challenging environment for human occupation. During the Soviet era, researchers discovered several stratified archaeological sites in the Pamir zone – including the Oshhona site, which yielded a large collection of lithic artefacts and personal ornaments made of bone. Pairing archaeozoological and biomolecular methods (Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry) with use-wear analysis, we investigate the tradition of personal bone ornament production that emerged in the Pamir mountains during the Middle Holocene. Our analyses indicate that inhabitants of Oshhona site used a wide range of faunal remains to manufacture non-utilitarian items – including pendants, elongated beads, and engraved bone. Comparison of raw materials, manufacture technology, and style provide compelling evidence of cultural links between the Pamir and the middle highlands of the Tian Shan. Although available anthropological and genetic evidence is too scattered to assess the possibility of population movements, our results point to a shared techno-cultural tradition or common cultural adaptation in bone ornament production across these two regions, perhaps developing as a response to life at high altitudes in Central Asia during the Middle Holocene.",
keywords = "AMS dating, Central Asia, Epipalaeolithic, Personal ornaments, Technological analysis, Use-wear analysis, ZooMS",
author = "Fedorchenko, {Alexander Yu} and Taylor, {William T.T.} and Sayfulloev, {Nuriddin N.} and Samantha Brown and William Rendu and Krivoshapkin, {Andrei I.} and Katerina Douka and Shnaider, {Svetlana V.}",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026",
language = "English",
volume = "559",
pages = "174--187",
journal = "Quaternary International",
issn = "1040-6182",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Early occupation of High Asia

T2 - New insights from the ornaments of the Oshhona site in the Pamir mountains

AU - Fedorchenko, Alexander Yu

AU - Taylor, William T.T.

AU - Sayfulloev, Nuriddin N.

AU - Brown, Samantha

AU - Rendu, William

AU - Krivoshapkin, Andrei I.

AU - Douka, Katerina

AU - Shnaider, Svetlana V.

PY - 2020/9/10

Y1 - 2020/9/10

N2 - The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challenging environment for human occupation. During the Soviet era, researchers discovered several stratified archaeological sites in the Pamir zone – including the Oshhona site, which yielded a large collection of lithic artefacts and personal ornaments made of bone. Pairing archaeozoological and biomolecular methods (Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry) with use-wear analysis, we investigate the tradition of personal bone ornament production that emerged in the Pamir mountains during the Middle Holocene. Our analyses indicate that inhabitants of Oshhona site used a wide range of faunal remains to manufacture non-utilitarian items – including pendants, elongated beads, and engraved bone. Comparison of raw materials, manufacture technology, and style provide compelling evidence of cultural links between the Pamir and the middle highlands of the Tian Shan. Although available anthropological and genetic evidence is too scattered to assess the possibility of population movements, our results point to a shared techno-cultural tradition or common cultural adaptation in bone ornament production across these two regions, perhaps developing as a response to life at high altitudes in Central Asia during the Middle Holocene.

AB - The Pamir plateau is one of the highest mountain systems in the world, presenting a highly challenging environment for human occupation. During the Soviet era, researchers discovered several stratified archaeological sites in the Pamir zone – including the Oshhona site, which yielded a large collection of lithic artefacts and personal ornaments made of bone. Pairing archaeozoological and biomolecular methods (Zooarchaeology by Mass Spectrometry) with use-wear analysis, we investigate the tradition of personal bone ornament production that emerged in the Pamir mountains during the Middle Holocene. Our analyses indicate that inhabitants of Oshhona site used a wide range of faunal remains to manufacture non-utilitarian items – including pendants, elongated beads, and engraved bone. Comparison of raw materials, manufacture technology, and style provide compelling evidence of cultural links between the Pamir and the middle highlands of the Tian Shan. Although available anthropological and genetic evidence is too scattered to assess the possibility of population movements, our results point to a shared techno-cultural tradition or common cultural adaptation in bone ornament production across these two regions, perhaps developing as a response to life at high altitudes in Central Asia during the Middle Holocene.

KW - AMS dating

KW - Central Asia

KW - Epipalaeolithic

KW - Personal ornaments

KW - Technological analysis

KW - Use-wear analysis

KW - ZooMS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089744315&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026

DO - 10.1016/j.quaint.2020.07.026

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85089744315

VL - 559

SP - 174

EP - 187

JO - Quaternary International

JF - Quaternary International

SN - 1040-6182

ER -

ID: 25298590