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RECONSTRUCTING MOBILITY AND LANDUSE PATTERNS IN NEOLITHIC AND COPPER AGE APULIA

The region of Apulia, southern Italy, is especially interesting during early Prehistory. Due to its fertile soils and its abundance of valuable raw materials, especially high-quality flint and obsidian sources off the coast, the density of settlements is very high from the earliest Neolithic onwards. In a selected area in this region, an ongoing project situated at the universities of Münster, Germany, and Bologna, Italy, and the Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paesaggio per le province di Barletta-Andria-Trani e Foggia, Italy, is currently dealing with the comprehension of how prehistoric communities moved in their territory and how they exploited the landscape during the Neolithic and the Copper Age up to its transitional aspects. This area was chosen because the region played an important role as a bridge between the eastern Mediterranean Sea and the inner Peninsular areas during pre- and protohistoric times, thus permitting a mutual exchange of ideas, artifacts and people.Since the landscape and human presence are linked via site distribution, the investigations will cross-reference the data through Social Network Analysis (SNA) in order to create a network of types of ties and relationships that connected these factors. This will be a fundamental aspect to comprehend how the ancient communities exploited the landscape, and to determine the reasons for site choices of settlement when they arrived, also in relation with local and foreign influences that began to emerge from the Neolithic onward. Hence, the research aims to introduce new ways to analyze the landscape in relation to human frequentation, combining the insights with further investigations such as a technical-stylistic analysis of artefacts. Author(s): Becker, Valeska - Filloramo, Roberto (Westfalische Wilhelms-Universitat Munster)

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