Tag: Catalhoyuk

  • Into the Stone Age With a Scalpel – A Dig With Clues on Early Urban Life

    Into the Stone Age With a Scalpel – A Dig With Clues on Early Urban Life

    By SUSANNE FOWLER

    Published: September 7, 2011

    CATALHOYUK, TURKEY — A pair of space-age shelters rising from the beet and barley fields of the flat Konya Plain are the first clue to the Catalhoyuk Research Project, where archaeologists are excavating a 9,000-year-old Neolithic village.

    Dig Site in Turkey Reveals an Ancient People’s Handiwork

    The experts, armed with scalpels, gingerly scraped away micro-layers of white plaster from a wall deep in the dig last month to reveal what the project director, the British archaeologist Ian Hodder, called a “very exciting” and “particularly intriguing” painting with deep reds and reddish oranges thought to be made with red ochre and cinnabar.

    “We were taking off many, many layers of plaster and we have a program where a joint team of Turkish and British conservators try to take them off one by one, so it’s extremely slow-going,” Dr. Hodder said this week by telephone.

    “I got called over to where they were working because they saw some paint. The pattern initially didn’t look like very much: We often find just specks of paint or a wall of all-red paint. But this time it gradually emerged that this was a complete painting, and the best preserved painting that I’ve ever seen at Catalhoyuk, with wonderfully fresh, bright colors and very neat lines.”

    Word of the discovery spread quickly through the international team on site as more of the painting was exposed.

    “It is by far the most intricate and elaborate painting we have found during our excavations here since the mid-90s,” Dr. Hodder said. “We’ve been waiting quite a long time for something so elaborate.”

    But Stone Age paintings don’t come with labels explaining what they are.

    “An interesting aspect of some of the paintings at Catal,” Dr. Hodder said, “is that they are very enigmatic and full of ambiguity and difficult to read.

    via Into the Stone Age With a Scalpel – A Dig With Clues on Early Urban Life – NYTimes.com.

  • Buried under ancient houses: Who are they?

    Buried under ancient houses: Who are they?

    Buried under ancient houses: Who are they?

    No family plots, just communal burials found beneath Turkish settlement

    By Owen Jarus
    updated 6/29/2011 2:02:11 PM ET 2011-06-29T18:02:11

    Human remains discovered beneath the floors of mud-brick houses at one of the world’s first permanent settlements, were not biologically related to one another, a finding that paints a new picture of life 9,000 years ago on a marshy plain in central Turkey.

    Even children as young as 8 were not buried alongside their parents or other relatives at the site called Catalhoyuk, the researchers found.

    “It speaks a lot to the type of social structure that they might have had,” study researcher Marin Pilloud, a physical anthropologist with the United States military at Joint Accounting Command in Hawaii, told LiveScience.

    An ancient society
    Catalhoyuk covered 26 acres, and its people — estimated to be as many as 10,000 — would have made a living by growing crops and herding domesticated animals. It was built on a marshy plain in central Turkey.

    Catalhoyuk Research Project

    The researchers used dental remains from 266 individuals to determine how they were related, with an example of a human jaw found at the site shown here.

    Before Catalhoyuk, most people on the planet made their living as hunter-gatherers, moving around the landscape in order to survive. In the period after Catalhoyuk was founded, more agricultural settlements were created in the Middle East, paving the way for large cities and the birth of the first civilizations.

    When archaeologists first dug up the site in the 1950s and ’60s, they found that the settlement contained no streets. Its plastered mud-brick houses were bunched up against each other, and the inhabitants entered them by way of a ladder on the roof. Inside the homes, the people drew art on the walls and created spear points and pottery.

    They also buried their dead (up to 30 of them per house) beneath the floors.

    Teeth tell all
    To figure out how the buried humans were related, scientists tried — unsuccessfully, due to the advanced age and contamination — to extract DNA from the skeletons.

    So Pilloud and Clark Spencer Larsen of Ohio State University analyzed the next best thing: the size and shape of their teeth. Since people who are related should have similarities in tooth morphology, the researchers compared the ancient dental remains of 266 individuals from the site. Their results are detailed in a paper recently published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.

    They found that the people buried beneath the floor of each house were, in general, not related to each other. With the possible exception of one building, this occurred throughout the entire site for as long as the settlement existed.

    Catalhoyuk Research Project

    A reconstruction of how a burial may have happened at Catalhoyuk.

    “It doesn’t look as if there was a strong genetic component to determining who would be buried together,” Pilloud said. The discovery suggests people living at Catalhoyuk were not tied to each other through strong bonds of kinship, she added.

    “I’m not trying to argue that biological relationships would not have been perhaps meaningful to the people at Catalhoyuk,” Pilloud said. But rather, biological kinship “wasn’t the sole defining principle much like we presume it was in the hunter-gatherer era.”

    Professor Ian Hodder of Stanford University, who directs current excavations and research efforts at Catalhoyuk, told LiveScience that the results offer a new perspective on what life was like at the ancient settlement.

    “It’s really quite exciting. Normally archaeologists have to just infer what the biological relationships might be; it opens up a whole new world,” said Hodder, who was not directly involved in this study. “In some ways the results are counterintuitive; they’re not really what we expected.”

    Collective living
    The results support one idea scientists have put forth: that Catalhoyuk society was determined by membership in houses in which a group of people passed down rights and resources, Hodder said.

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    “Membership of the house was not based on biological kin but on a wide range of processes by which people could join the house,” he explained.

    Each house may have had access to its own tools, hunting grounds, water sources and agricultural lands. The organization of each house at Catalhoyuk may have in fact encompassed several actual homes at the site.

    “What distinguishes each entity is their co-ownership of a series of resources,” Hodder said.

    Becoming urbanites
    The change from biological to more practically based bonds may have been the result of the Catalhoyuk people’s move to adopt an urban lifestyle, based on agriculture. That could have altered their view of family relationships.

    “Before, you were hunters and gatherers, in loose groups that were very highly mobile. Now you’re all tied together, and you’re all living in close quarters,” Pilloud said.

    “They might have called on other groups of individuals, outside of their biological family, to do things like take the herd to the pasture or to help with the harvest, things that might have required more people.”

    Hodder said this discovery suggests Catalhoyuk was a more complex society than had been thought.

    “I think that as society becomes more sedentary and complex that kinship itself doesn’t seem to be sufficient to hold it together,” he said. “This is suggesting that they’ve got (a) sufficiently complex level that they needed something more complex than kinship.”