I.V. Schmidt. Cruciform Signs Decorating Paleolithic Bone Artifacts from Cherno-Ozerye II, the Middle Irtysh Area
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Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology
of Eurasia

49 (1) 2021

 

doi:10.17746/1563-0110.2021.49.1.021-029

Annotation:    

Cruciform Signs Decorating Paleolithic Bone Artifacts
from Cherno-Ozerye II, the Middle Irtysh Area

I.V. Schmidt

Dostoevsky Omsk State University, Pr. Mira 55a, bldg. 2, Omsk, 644077, Russia

This study describes decorated bone artifacts from the Final Paleolithic or Epipaleolithic site of Cherno-Ozerye II in the Middle Irtysh area—a fragment of a bone dagger hilt found during the 1971 excavations, and fragments of bone “needle cases” found in 2019. An interpretation of the meaning of cruciform signs on the artifacts is suggested with reference to technology and form. Parallels from Ural and Eastern European sites are discussed. It is concluded that in terms of technology, morphology, and “syntax”, the signs are stable markers of certain hunter-gatherer groups. Their specificity and possible meaning suggest that the Middle Irtysh area was a contact zone between Western (Ural) and Eastern Siberian groups of Paleolithic foragers. As a result of their interaction, an original decorative style was formed.

Keywords: Southwestern Siberia, Cherno-Ozerye II, Final Paleolithic, Epipaleolithic, decorative traditions, cruciform signs