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European Journal of Archaeology
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Tåagerup–Fifteen Hundred Years of Mesolithic Occupation in Western Scania, Sweden: A Preliminary View

Per Karsten

Bo KnarrstrÎm

National Heritage Board, Archaeological Excavations Department, Sweden

The slopes of the Tagerup promontory in western Scania contain one of the largest known Mesolithic settlements that has ever been excavated in Scandinavia. The Tagerup site displays a unique combination of huts and houses, graves and wooden implements, flints and bones which constitute a 1500-year-long Mesolithic occupation sequence, dated 6500–5000 cal BC. During that time, there were gradual but far-reaching changes in settlement structure and organization, the use of the landscape, flint technology and food procurement strategies.

Key Words: cemeteries • cultural divergence • Ertebolle • flint technology • houses • Kongemose

European Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 4, No. 2, 165-174 (2001)
DOI: 10.1177/146195710100400201


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P. Lageras
Approaches and Methods for Commissioned Archaeology in Wetlands: Experience from the E4 Project in Skane, Southern Sweden
European Journal of Archaeology, December 1, 2003; 6(3): 231 - 249.
[Abstract] [PDF]