Abstract

The transition from the Mongolian Neolithic to the Bronze Age is not well understood. Within Ikh Nart Nature Reserve, over a period of five years, we identified a number of sites with dense surface artefact scatters and features that seem to represent this transition period. Evident in those concentrations are characteristic microblade cores, microblades, “thumbnail" flake scrapers, projectile points, ground stone tools, and stone features of unknown function. Between 2012 and 2014 we collected ground stone artefacts from four sites and sediment samples from three sites. With permission of Mongolian authorities, the artefacts from one site and sediment samples from three sites were sent for botanical analyses to the University of Texas, Austin, Environmental Archaeology Laboratory. Preliminary results indicate that plant remains are present on the ground stone artefacts: dendritic long-cells from a deep pore of one artefact and starch grains from the pores of six of the seven artefacts. These data present the first opportunity to understand what resources “Neolithic” people were processing with ground stone tools in this area and further our opportunity to better understand the little-known “Neolithic”-Early Bronze Age transition period in Central Asia. This paper describes the ground stone artefacts and further explores the results of data retrieved from some of these artefacts.

Highlights

  • The Mongolian “Neolithic” is not well understood and our knowledge regarding its postulated anticipatory position leading to the better known Bronze Age is minimal

  • Little “Neolithic” research has been conducted in Mongolia and, there is little agreement regarding its time frame, while most research has been conducted within the timeframes of more highly visible remnants of later peoples on the landscape

  • The vast majority of the milling stones we have observed and collected at Ikh Nart are composed of feldspathic sandstone, sometimes known as greywacke - a few milling stones are of basaltic material; historic-period rotary millstones that we found during survey are of granitic material and vesicular basalt

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Summary

Introduction

The Mongolian “Neolithic” is not well understood and our knowledge regarding its postulated anticipatory position leading to the better known Bronze Age is minimal. Our archaeological work at Ikh NartinChuulu Nature Reserve (Ikh Nart) in DornogoviAimag (province) of central southeastern Mongolia began in 2010 (Figure 1). Until this date, no systematic archaeological investigations had been conducted in this area of Mongolia. Our project is focused on management strategies for a Mongolian Protected Area as a model for a United Nations-sponsored Special Protected Area Network (SPAN), Ikh Nart presents research opportunities in the transitional zone between the Gobi Desert and Steppe environments. We see our work at Ikh Nart as an opportunity to add to the earlier archaeological record of the Mongolian prehistory, that portion of the archaeological record leading toward the emergence of Mongolia’s iconic pastoral-nomadic cultures

The Environmental setting
The milling tools
The Ikh Nart “Neolithic” milling tools described
Petrography
Milling tool laboratory studies
Starch and phytolites results
Findings
Discussion of results and direction for future work
Full Text
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