An inquiry into the "missing" Central Balkans Mesolithic: faunal remains from Bukovac cave, Serbia

Main Authors: Živaljević, Ivana, Dimitrijević, Vesna, Dogandžić, Tamara, Talamo, Sahra, Mihailović, Dušan
Format: Proceeding Journal
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: , 2018
Subjects:
Online Access: https://zenodo.org/record/1475273
Daftar Isi:
  • Apart from the well/known Mesolithic sites in the Danube Gorges, occupied more or less continuously between c. 9500-5500 cal BC, the evidence of human presence in the North-Central Balkans in the Early Holocene is virtually non-existent. This puzzling phenomenon has been associated with presumed low population densities, changing environmental conditions, geomorphological effects on site survival and visibility, or the lack of research. In that respect, recent excavations at the cave site of Bukovac near Despotovac in the Resava river valley (tributary of Velika Morava, Central Serbia) (Dogandyic et al. 2014: 2017) provide important new data relevant ot the understanding of the phenomenon. The stratigraphic sequence at Bukovac is predominantly related to the Upper Paleolithic (mainly Gravettian) occupancy, manifested by rich lithic assemblage, hearths, bone tools and abundant faunal material. However, the Early Holocene use of the cave had also been confirmed, on the basis of partially preserved layer along the cave wall, containing animal bones which produced a Mesolithic date. Apart from dating, the taxonomic composition of the sample (including remains of wild game, mustelids, rodents, birds and a significant amount of fish bones) is unequivocally reflecting Early Holocene biodiversity and foraging (hunting and fishing) patterns. In this paper, we present the results of archaeozoologaicl analysis of the faunal sample from the Bukovac Mesolithic layer, but also discuss the implications of its state of preservation in the broader contest of Mesolithic "invisibility" in the archaeological record.