Isotopic evidence for residential mobility of farming communities during the transition to agriculture in Britain
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Date
2016Author
Neil, Samantha
Evans, Jane
Montgomery, Janet
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Development of agriculture is often assumed to be accompanied by a decline in residential mobility, and sedentism is frequently proposed to provide the basis for economic intensification, population growth and increasing social complexity. In Britain, however, the nature of the agricultural transition (ca4000 BC) and its effect on residence patterns has been intensely debated. Some authors attribute the transition to the arrival of populations who practised a system of sedentary intensive mixed farming similar to that of the very earliest agricultural regimes in central Europe,ca5500 BC, with cultivation of crops in fixed plots and livestock keeping close to permanently occupied farmsteads.
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