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diversify rather than increasing volume. As such, the wetlands offered, next to hunting and fishing, optimized conditions for cattle and small scale cultivation of different crops, each having conditions for growing of their own. The agrarian transformation of the prehistoric community was an exclusively indigenous process, that ultimately realized itself only at the end of the
Neolithic. This view has been supported by the discovery of an agricultural field in Swifterbant dated 4300–4000 BC.
114:(Doel) and hybrid Rössen pottery Hamburg-Boberg. In general, Swifterbant pottery does not show the same variety as Rössen pottery and Swifterbant pottery with Rössen influences are rare. Possibly the idea of cooking could be derived from agricultural neighbours. However, the technical style for making pottery are too different to consider such external influences.
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The Rössen culture, being an offshoot of Linear
Pottery, is older than the finds in Swifterbant, and contemporary to older stages of this culture as found in Hoge Vaart (Almere) and Hardinxveld. Contact between Swifterbant and Rössen expressed itself by some hybrid early Swifterbant pots in Antwerp
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Wetland settlement, unlike previous opinions, was a deliberate choice by prehistoric communities, as this offered attractive ecological conditions and a high natural productivity or agricultural potential. The economy covered a broad spectrum of resources to gather food, ruled by a strategy to
161:, Swifterbant pottery is dated NEOVB (early Neolithic) to NEOMA (Early Middle Neolithic), standardized by "De Rijksdienst voor Archeologie, Cultuurlandschap en Monumenten (RACM)" as a period dated from 5300 BC to 3400 BC.
236:
Swifterbant-aardewerk : een analyse van de neolithische nederzettingen bij
Swifterbant, 5e millennium voor Christus, J.P. de Roever. Groningen, 2004
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79:, normally associated with Northern Germany and Southern Scandinavia. The culture is ancestral to the Western group of the agricultural
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has been attested from this period. In the region indications to the existence of pottery are present from before the arrival of the
32:, the settlements were concentrated near water, in this case creeks, riverdunes and bogs along post-glacial banks of rivers like the
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in the neighbourhood. The material culture reflects a local evolution from
Mesolithic communities, with a pottery in a Nordic (
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Wetland
Exploitation and Upland,Relations of Prehistoric Communities in the Netherlands - L. P. Louwe Kooijmans
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are attributed to
Swifterbant and suggest a religious role for both wild and domesticated bovines.
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The oldest finds related to this culture, dated to circa 5600 BC, cannot be distinguished from the
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In the 1960s and 1970s, artifacts classified as "Swifterbant culture" were found in the (now dry)
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83:(4000–2700 BC), which extended through Northern Netherlands and Northern Germany to the
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According to the Dutch "Het
Archeologisch Basisregister (ABR), versie 1.0 november 1992"
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culture to cattle farming, primarily cows and pigs, occurred around 4800–4500 BC.
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Archaeology and
Coastal Change in the Netherlands - Dr L. P. Louwe Kooijmans, 1980
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Trijntje van de
Betuweroute, Jachtkampen uit de Steentijd te Hardinxveld-Giessendam
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communities, as testified by the presence of true
Breitkeile pottery sherds.
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De spiegel van Swifterbant - Daan Raemakers, 2006, University of Groningen
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Prehistoric agricultural field found in Swifterbant, 4300–4000 BC
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The earliest dated sites are season settlements. A transition from
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378:Archaeological cultures in the Netherlands
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121:Animal sacrifices found in the bogs of
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328:: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
279:: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
368:4th-millennium BC disestablishments
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393:Archaeological cultures in Germany
216:LĂĽning, et al., 1989; LĂĽning, 2000
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173:L. P. Louwe Kooijmans -
100:Linear Pottery culture
65:Hardinxveld-Giessendam
201:Trechterbekercultuur
81:Funnelbeaker culture
140:Pitted Ware culture
18:Swifterbant culture
187:2007-07-26 at the
179:Spiegel Historiael
34:Overijsselse Vecht
181:33, blz. 423-428,
135:Ertebølle culture
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146:References
59:) and the
104:Ertebølle
324:cite web
275:cite web
185:Archived
177:, 1998,
129:See also
71:Overview
123:Drenthe
96:Pottery
49:Dronten
61:Betuwe
20:was a
309:(PDF)
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