Marine exploitation and the arrival of farming: resolving the paradox of the Mesolithic-Neolithic transition in Denmark

T. Rowan McLaughlin, Harry K. Robson, Rikke Maring, Adam Boethius, Eric Guiry, Daniel Groß, Satu Koivisto, Bente Philippsen, Nicky Milner, Geoff Bailey, Oliver E. Craig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
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Abstract

The transition to farming in the coastal environments of southern Scandinavia remains a key conundrum in European prehistory. This region was heavily exploited by Late Mesolithic communities of the Ertebølle culture, complex hunter-fisher-gatherers who flourished for some 1500 years prior to the arrival of farming at around 4000 BCE marking the start of the Neolithic period. Extensive genetic and isotopic analyses of skeletal remains suggests that the arrival of farming is marked by a rapid demographic change and that incoming populations of ‘farmers’ had little reliance on marine resources. In contrast, frequent archaeological finds of shell middens and fishing gear in the Early Neolithic supports evidence for continuity in the use of marine resources across the transition.

To assess this apparent paradox, focusing on the Danish evidence, we explore the spatiotemporal trends in the density of some 1500 radiocarbon dates using new informatics tools and modelling strategies. We indeed find strong archaeological indicators of sustained and even intensified patterns of coastal exploitation across and beyond the transition; shell middens, fishing implements, and aquatic residues in ceramics continue well into the Neolithic. Using an agent-based demographic model, we demonstrate how small differences in fertility could rapidly dilute signals of coastal resource use in the context of a growing Neolithic population. More broadly, we suggest that complex palimpsests of archaeological remains and biological information from human remains can only usefully be interpreted through the lens of demography.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109447
Number of pages17
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume363
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2025

Keywords

  • Agent-based modelling
  • Farmers
  • Fish
  • Fishing gear
  • Hunter-gatherers
  • Marine mammals
  • Mid-Holocene
  • Organic residues
  • Radiocarbon dating
  • Shell banks
  • Shell middens
  • Stable isotopes

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