Abstract
At the site of Zambratija Bay in the northern Adriatic Sea, underwater archaeologists recorded over 120 wooden piles and material culture from a Late Neolithic to early Bronze Age submerged settlement at a depth of three metres under water. Situated in a sunken karstic depression off the Croatian coast, the seabed was partly covered with a well-preserved peat bed. Archaeological material included typologically identifiable ceramic and stone tool artefacts. This article presents original results derived from a 2017 targeted archaeological and dendrochronological assessment of the site and reviews the archaeological findings in their wider regional context. Results include a wiggle-matched 62- year floating dendrochronological sequence of the found prehistoric architecture dating the site to 4041-3934 cal BC (95.4% probability). Combined with evidence on other prehistoric piledwellings in Croatia, the results from Zambratija Bay suggest a need to revise the geographical expansion of the European Prehistoric Pile Dwellings phenomenon, which has been a topic of debate in European archaeology since the 19th century
Translated title of the contribution | AN ASSESSMENT OF THE DENDROCHRONOLOGICAL POTENTIAL ON THE SUBMERGED PREHISTORIC PILE-DWELLING IN ZAMBRATIJA BAY WITHIN THE WIDER CONTEXT OF PREHISTORIC PILE-DWELLINGS IN CROATIA |
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Original language | Croatian |
Pages (from-to) | 5-32 |
Number of pages | 28 |
Journal | Histria Archaeologica |
Volume | 2023 |
Issue number | 54 |
Publication status | Published - 17 Dec 2024 |
Keywords
- dendrochronology
- prehistoric pile-dwelling
- submerged Prehistory