Abstract

The Altai Mountains are well-known for their unique archaeological records, with rich, chronologically sequenced Palaeolithic, Neolithic and the Bronze Age (late fourth–early first millennium BC) sites and, in particular, the Iron Age Scytho-Siberian and early historical monuments represented by burial sites, ritual structures, and rock-art. The Altai prehistoric archaeological localities are distributed across a broad range of topographic and ecological settings, encompassing altitudinal zones from 800 m asl in the lower reaches of glacial river valleys up to 2500/3000 m asl on the high mountain plateaus. The partial spatial overlap of these (often multi-component) geoarchaeological loci over time suggests that similar adaptive strategies were employed by countless generations of hunter and later nomadic communities—their actions constrained by the locally specific forms of (palaeo-)relief and the associated ecosystems. The dynamics of the initial occupation of the boreal and alpine Altai landscapes and subsequent processes of (re-)colonisation during the Final Pleistocene-Holocene transition are directly linked to transformations in the regional hydrological systems after the LGM. The principal settings for early pastoral settlements were the xerothermic grasslands that formed on the flat glacio-lacustrine terraces which rise above the modern fluvial floodplains—the remains of ice-dammed wastage lake basins drained at the end of the Pleistocene (15,000–13,000 year BP). Marked climatic changes, evidenced by regional variations in temperature and humidity across the territory, are well attested in the geological, biotic and archaeological records. The initial Sub-Boreal aridification correlated with the beginnings of the Altai Bronze Age traditions continued until the early Iron Age—causing an expansion of parkland-steppe in the main valleys and a forest retreat in the foothills. Mountain steppes constituted the most essential food-procurement habitat for the Holocene prehistoric and historical settlements of Southern Altai. The current degradation of insular alpine permafrost poses an imminent threat to preservation of the region’s most precious archaeological monuments—the frozen burial mounds of the Pazyryk culture (sixth–third century BC) belonging to the UNESCO World cultural heritage.

Highlights

  • The Altai is renowned for its unique archaeological heritage— a rich cultural record that charts the long and complex history of this mountainous region

  • Based on the present-day analogues from the same geographic area inhabited by the modern Altai/Kazakh/Mongol communities practicing the traditional seasonally based semi-sedentary pastoral economy with presumably the same adaptive patterns and shelters (Fig. 4f), these anthropogenically induced environmental shifts are believed to have been most pronounced on the open glaciofluvial terraces in the main as well as subsidiary valleys of the Katun’–Chuya –Argut Basins that represented the principal prehistoric as well as historical settlement concentration loci

  • Except for ritual meaning and/or a social status attribute, these zoomorphic records best-known from funeral goods from the famous Scythian burial complexes at Pazyryk in Gorno Altai, Ak-Alakha on Plateau Ukok and Berel’ in East Kazakhstan (Fig. 4d) testify to the wide topographic range of prehistoric activities and the variety of ancient lifestyles (Rudenko 1970; Polosmak 2001; Polidovich 2008; Marsalodov 2013)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Altai is renowned for its unique archaeological heritage— a rich cultural record that charts the long and complex history of this mountainous region. This became evident since the Bronze Age due to the rising population as seen by the increased number of multi-layered archaeological sites of the Afanasievo, Karakol and early Scythian traditions, and expansion of occupation habitat into the sub-alpine zone as well as the higher-altitude steppes

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.