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The Climate, Environment and Industries of Stone Age Greece: Part I

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2014

S. I. Dakaris
Affiliation:
Ephor of Epirus, Ioannina
E. S. Higgs
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge
R. W. Hey
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Cambridge

Extract

This paper is the result of a survey of a part of Macedonia and Epirus carried out in 1962 and sponsored by the British School of Archaeology at Athens. In 1963 under the aegis of S. I. Dakaris, ephor of Epirus, excavations were carried out to confirm some of the hypotheses resulting from the earlier survey. The cost of the work was defrayed partly by the British Academy and the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Cambridge, and partly by the members of the expeditions themselves. In this paper it is proposed to place on record some of the findings of these expeditions. A more detailed consideration of them will be published after further information has been acquired in 1964.

Prior to 1962 little was known of the Stone Age industries of Greece. In contrast with the industrial successions established in Western Europe, Central Europe, Russia and the Levant, Greece had remained virtually a blank on the Palaeolithic map. As late as 1923 Jardé had written that not a single palaeolithic tool was known from Greek soil. Apart from three pieces of uncertain provenance attributed by Breuil to the Upper Palaeolithic, and one from Saloniki noted by Obermaier, no further progress seems to have been made until the German and Italian occupation of Greece and Albania. In 1941 Stampfuss dug the cave of Seidi between Thebes and Levadia. He discovered an industry which contained backed-blades, burins, shouldered points and thick scrapers. It is undated, but is a Gravettoid industry, possibly at a fully developed or even later stage. Mustilli also reported in 1941 the finding of a Middle Palaeolithic industry in Albania. Since that time Servais has noted the presence of apparently early flints in the Peloponnese, a fact subsequently investigated by Leroi-Gourhan in 1962. Byelor has also reported some flakes of Levallois type. The most important work, however, has been that of Milojčić, published in 1958, and arising out of the work in previous years of the German Thessaly Expedition.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1964

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References

Bordes, F. 1951. ‘Principes d'une methode d'étude des techniques de débitage et de la typologie du Paléolithique ancien et moyen’, L'Anthropologie, t. 54, pp. 1934.Google Scholar
Bordes, F. 1963. ‘Typologie du Paléolithique Ancien et Moyen’, Publications of the Institute of Prehistory of the University of Bordeaux, Mém. no. 1 (Bordeaux).Google Scholar