Abstract

The interdisciplinary project, titled 'Living together or apart? Unravelling the development, internal organization, and social structure of a complex Bronze Age tell settlement at Toboliu, western Romania,' seeks to analyse Bronze Age settlement activity in Toboliu, located in the easternmost Carpathian Basin. Key aspects of the study include associated land-use and landscape evolution, making the reconstruction of the tell's surroundings a focal point. The study area is dominated by loess and significantly influenced by both modern and prehistoric agricultural practices. Thus, it is a major challenge to differentiate between landscape features caused by natural soil-landscape formation processes and human activity especially for the investigated period. Within this context we focussed our research on closed depressions surrounding the tell and investigated two hypotheses regarding their formation: i) closed depressions result from human activities (such as daub extraction pits) and ii) formed through natural soil-geomorphological processes (like loess dolines or periglacial relicts). Based on core drillings, we made use of Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL), radiocarbon-supported, and palynological chronostratigraphical analyses. In addition, we took advantage of spatial analysis involving a high-resolution LIDAR elevation model, multispectral WorldView-3 imagery, and magnetographic data to thoroughly testing both hypotheses. Our results suggest that the examined closed depressions exhibit characteristics reminiscent of specific periglacial relict forms, more commonly known from northern European landscapes. Details will be discussed within the presentation.

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