Английская Википедия:Aetokremnos
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox ancient site Aetokremnos is a rock shelter near Limassol on the southern coast of Cyprus. It is situated on a steep cliff site c. Шаблон:Convert above the Mediterranean sea. The name means "Cliff of the eagles" in Greek. Around Шаблон:Convert have been excavated and out of the four layers documented, the third is sterile.
Discovery
The site, which is located on a British Royal Air Force base, was discovered in 1980 by an anonymous amateur, who reported the find to Stuart Swiny (director of the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute in Nicosia). Swiny noted the existence of flint artifacts and a large number of hippo bones and that much of the site had eroded into the Mediterranean. Subsequent study and excavation of the site was conducted by Swiny and other archaeologists.[1]
Archaeology
The site contains mainly bones of the Late Pleistocene endemic Cyprus Dwarf Hippopotamus (Hippopotamus minor), a lesser amount of the Cyprus dwarf elephant (Palaeoloxodon cypriotes) and artifacts (c. 1,000 flints including thumbnail scrapers of the Mesolithic type). There is no evidence of a land bridge linking Cyprus to Turkey, meaning the normally sized ancestors of the hippos and elephants most likely swam to the island. There are no bones that show marks of butchery, but an unusually high frequency (30%) of burned bones. The pygmy hippos make up c. 74% of the bones, followed by fish remains (25%) and birds, mainly bustards. Dwarf elephants are comparatively rare (3 individuals). The presence of fallow deer (4 bones) and pig (13 bones) is puzzling, since these animals are thought to have been introduced only in the Neolithic period.[2]
According to the excavators, hearth remains are found in the layer containing the bone beds of the extinct megafauna. This would make it the oldest site on the island and evidence of Epipalaeolithic occupation. The original 31 radiocarbon dates put the date of the bones at c. 12,500 years BP. and suggest a short-term occupation. These dates have been challenged as the excavators considered the nine bone dates to be the least reliable and did not agree with the dates of the stratigraphy where they were found. As of 2013 there are now 36 radiocarbon dates of which 13 were taken from animal bones (pig and hippo). A 2013 report states that even discarding these and relying on the other 23 determinations on charcoal, sediment and shell "we reaffirm our original interpretation of a relatively short occupation of some 300 years centered around 11,775 years BP, with a range of 11,652 to 11,955 years BP at one standard deviation, or 11,504 to 12,096 years BP at two standard deviations. This is in general accord with Manning’s (2013:501 to 503) masterful compilation of all early Cypriot radiocarbon determinations, in which he places Aetokremnos within an approximate 12,950 to 10,950 years BP range while also preferring a somewhat longer occupation than we presented."[3][4]
There are other deposits with bones of pygmy elephants and hippopotami on the island, but these do not contain artifacts.[1]
The origin of the bones at the site is disputed. Some authors have suggested that the bones were accumulated at the site by humans,[5] while other authors contend that the age distribution curve of the hippotamus bones suggests that the bones accumulated naturally at the site over hundreds of years, and the burnt bones are the result of later fires lit in the rockshelter by humans following their arrival to Cyprus, by which time the bones were already several centuries old.[6]
References
Sources
Шаблон:Navbox prehistoric caves Шаблон:Authority control
- Английская Википедия
- Archaeological sites in Cyprus
- Former populated places in Cyprus
- Prehistoric Cyprus
- 1980 archaeological discoveries
- Mesolithic sites of Asia
- Mesolithic sites of Europe
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