Rašinovac near Ždrapanj (northern Dalmatia) – An early neolithic site

Authors

  • Emil Podrug Muzej grada Šibenika
  • Sarah B. Mcclure The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Anthropology, University Park
  • Zlatko Perhoč Institut für Geowissenschaften, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
  • Sonja Kačar Université Toulouse
  • Kelly Reed School of Life Sciences, Gibbet Hill Campus, The University of Warwick
  • Emily Zavodny The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Anthropology, University Park

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15291/archeo.3023

Keywords:

Rašinovac, Early Neolithic, Impressed Ware, settlement, Northern Dalmatia

Abstract

This paper presents the results from an archaeological excavation at the Neolithic site of Rašinovac, near Ždrapanj in the Piramatovci Valley (in the hinterland of the town of Skradin in Northern Dalmatia). This previously unknown site was test excavated in 2013 when a 2x2-metre trench was opened to determine the site’s stratigraphy and chronology. Excavations suggested that Rašinovac was a single-layer open-air settlement and subsequent analyses of the material culture (mostly pottery and chert) confirmed that it was an Impressed Ware site. Two radiocarbon dates also reveal that Rašinovac is among the earliest known Early Neolithic sites in the region (first century of the 6th millennium BC).

References

Published

2020-07-08

Issue

Section

Original scientific paper

How to Cite

“Rašinovac Near Ždrapanj (northern Dalmatia) – An Early Neolithic Site”. 2020. Archaeologia Adriatica 12 (1). https://doi.org/10.15291/archeo.3023.

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