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Archaeology, Ethnology & Anthropology of Eurasia
49 (3) 2021
doi:10.17746/1563-0110.2021.49.3.024-031
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Annotation:
Results of Radiocarbon Dating of Early Burials
in the Firsovo Archaeological Area, Barnaul Stretch of the Ob
K.Y. Kiryushin1, Y.F. Kiryushin1, K.N. Solodovnikov2, Y.V. Frolov1, and A.V. Schmidt3
1Altai State University, Pr. Lenina 61, Barnaul, 656049, Russia
2Institute of Northern Development, Tyumen Scientific Center, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Malygina 86, Tyumen, 625026, Russia
3Museum of Nature and Man, Mira 14a, Khanty-Mansiysk, 628011, Russia
An especially noteworthy part of the Firsovo archaeological area is a group of early burials at the flat-grave cemeteries Novoaltaisk-Razvilka, Firsovo XI, and Firsovo XIV. Nine radiocarbon dates have been generated for those cemeteries at various laboratories: two by the liquid-scintillation (LSC) method and seven using the accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) method. The dates were calibrated using OxCal version 3.10 software. Dates for the Chalcolithic Bolshoy Mys culture burials at Novoaltaisk-Razvilka and Tuzovskiye Bugry-1 burial 7 match the previously suggested ones (around 3000 BC). Certain Neolithic burials in the Altai differ from others in the position of the bodies (flexed on the side). They were dated to the late 5th to the early 4th millennia BC by the AMS method. Burials belonging to the “cultural core" of Firsovo XI, then, fall within the Early Neolithic (68 % interval, 5710-5460 BC; 95 % interval, 5740-5360 BC). The date 9106 ± 80 BP (GV-02889), obtained for Firsovo XI burial 18, may be somewhat accurate, pointing to the Final Mesolithic or Early Neolithic. Both the date and the cultural characteristics of this burial (sitting position, abundant ocher) are accompanied by the craniometric distinctness of the male cranium (huge total size).
Keywords: Flat-grave burial ground, Final Mesolithic, Early Neolithic burial, Middle Neolithic, Chalcolithic