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Featured researches published by Ursula Thanheiser.


Journal of World Prehistory | 2015

The Aegean in the Early 7th Millennium BC: Maritime Networks and Colonization

Barbara Horejs; B. Milić; F. Ostmann; Ursula Thanheiser; Bernhard Weninger; Alfred Galik

The process of Near Eastern neolithization and its westward expansion from the core zone in the Levant and upper Mesopotamia has been broadly discussed in recent decades, and many models have been developed to describe the spread of early farming in terms of its timing, structure, geography and sociocultural impact. Until now, based on recent intensive investigations in northwestern and western Anatolia, the discussion has mainly centred on the importance of Anatolian inland routes for the westward spread of neolithization. This contribution focuses on the potential impact of east Mediterranean and Aegean maritime networks on the spread of the Neolithic lifestyle to the western edge of the Anatolian subcontinent in the earliest phases of sedentism. Employing the longue durée model and the concept of ‘social memory’, we will discuss the arrival of new groups via established maritime routes. The existence of maritime networks prior to the spread of farming is already indicated by the high mobility of Epipalaeolithic/Mesolithic groups exploring the Aegean and east Mediterranean seas, and reaching, for example, the Cyclades and Cyprus. Successful navigation by these early mobile groups across the open sea is attested by the distribution of Melian obsidian. The potential existence of an additional Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) obsidian network that operated between Cappadocia/Cilicia and Cyprus further hints at the importance of maritime coastal trade. Since both the coastal and the high seas networks were apparently already well established in this early period, we may further assume appropriate knowledge of geographic routes, navigational technology and other aspects of successful seafaring. This Mesolithic/PPN maritime know-how package appears to have been used by later groups, in the early 7th millennium calBC, exploring the centre of the Anatolian Aegean coast, and in time establishing some of the first permanent settlements in that region. In the present paper, we link this background of newcomers to the western edge of Anatolia with new excavation results from Çukuriçi Höyük, which we have analysed in terms of subsistence strategies, materiality, technology and symbolism. Additionally, further detailed studies of nutrition and obsidian procurement shed light on the distinct maritime affinity of the early settlers in our case study, something that, in our view, can hardly be attributed to inland farming societies. We propose a maritime colonization in the 7th millennium via routes from the eastern Mediterranean to the eastern Aegean, based on previously developed sea networks. The pronounced maritime affinity of these farming and herding societies allows us to identify traces of earlier PPN concepts still embedded in the social-cultural memories of the newcomers and incorporated in a new local and regional Neolithic identity.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2010

14C dating of the Early to Late Bronze Age stratigraphic sequence of Aegina Kolonna, Greece

Eva Maria Wild; W. Gauß; G. Forstenpointner; Michael Lindblom; Rudolfine Smetana; Peter Steier; Ursula Thanheiser; F. Weninger


Praehistorische Zeitschrift | 2011

Aktivitäten und Subsistenz in den Siedlungen des Çukuriçi Höyük. Der Forschungsstand nach den Ausgrabungen 2006–2009

Barbara Horejs; Alfred Galik; Ursula Thanheiser; Silvia Wiesinger


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2016

Human impact on Holocene sediment dynamics in the Eastern Mediterranean – the example of the Roman harbour of Ephesus

Friederike Stock; Maria Knipping; Anna Pint; Sabine Ladstätter; Hugo Delile; Andreas G. Heiss; Hannes Laermanns; Piers D. Mitchell; René Ployer; Martin Steskal; Ursula Thanheiser; Ralf Urz; Volker Wennrich; Helmut Brückner


Archive | 2002

Roman agriculture and gardening in Egypt as seen from Kellis

Ursula Thanheiser; Johannes Walter; Colin Hope


Archaeologia Austriaca | 2015

Punta di Zambrone (Calabria) – a Bronze Age Harbour Site. First Preliminary Report on the Recent Bronze Age (2011– 2012 Campaigns)

Reinhard Jung; Marco Pacciarelli; Barbara Zach; Marlies Klee; Ursula Thanheiser


Acta Palaeobotanica | 1995

Electrostatic extraction of archaeological plant remains from soil: A new method

Ursula Thanheiser


Archive | 2016

Chapter 9: Unfired Clay Objects

Douglas V. Campana; Angela Cervi; Pam Crabtree; Paola Davoli; Delphine Dixneuf; David Ratzan; Giovanni Ruffini; Ursula Thanheiser; Johannes Walter


Archive | 2014

A Glimpse of Mediterraneanisation? First Analyses of Hellenistic and Roman Charcoal Remains from Ter

Andreas G. Heiss; Ursula Thanheiser


Archive | 2013

Les dcouvertes botaniques dune structure de schage/grillage de crales Carnuntum, Basse-Autric

Andreas G. Heiss; Ursula Thanheiser

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Alfred Galik

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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Barbara Horejs

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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G. Forstenpointner

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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F. Ostmann

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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G. E. Weissengruber

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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