Abstract
The spread of early farming in Europe is revisited using a sample of 3072
audited 14C calBC dates from 940 georeferenced early Neolithic sites. The
surface expansion of early Neolithic has been reconstituted using the kriging
technique of spatial interpolation. Centres of renewed expansion, of contact
zones, and the main routes of expansion have been highlighted by means of a
vector map, representing the gradient. The expansion of the agricultural system
on the map, was not uniform and regular across Europe as a whole, but proceeded
in leaps. With the scale of detection of the 500-year isochrones, several leaps
are identifiable: at 8000 calBC crossing the Taurus barrier, 6700–6100 calBC
crossing the southern Adriatic barrier, 6100–5600 calBC crossing the Central
European agro-ecological barrier and 5000–4000 calBC expanding on the other,
marginal zones. Using a vector map, 10 points of renewed expansion and nine
contact zones, were detected. The whole does not correspond to a process of
homogeneous diffusion, approximately steady, but a process marked by phases of
geographical expansion and stasis.
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