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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Iberian Neolithic Networks: The Rise and Fall of the Cardial World

Sergi LozanoSalvador Pardo-gordóJoan Bernabeu Auban

subject

010506 paleontologyPopulationEconomic historySpace and timeIberian peninsula01 natural sciencesPrehistòriaDigital HumanitiesEvolució culturalcomplex networkBetweenness centralityCultural diversityNeolític0601 history and archaeologyEconomic geographyNeolithiccultural evolutionSociocultural evolutioneducationEvolutionary dynamics0105 earth and related environmental scienceseducation.field_of_studySocial evolution060102 archaeologyHistòria econòmicacardial cultureNeolithic periodGeneral Medicine06 humanities and the artsComplex networkNetwork dynamicsArchaeologyGeographyPenínsula IbèricaEspai i tempsCultural artifactIberian Peninsula

description

Recent approaches have described the evolutionary dynamics of the first Neolithic societies as a cycle of rise and fall. Several authors, using mainly c14 dates as a demographic proxy, identified a general pattern of a boom in population coincident with the arrival of food production economies followed by a rapid decline some centuries afterwards in multiple European regions. Concerning Iberia, we also noted that this phenomenon correlates with an initial development of archaeological entities (i.e., ‘cultures’) over large areas (e.g. the Impresso-Cardial in West Mediterranean), followed by a phase of ‘cultural fragmentation’ by the end of Early Neolithic. These results in a picture of higher cultural diversity as an effect of more limited spread of cultural artifacts. In this work we propose to apply a network approach to the analysis of material culture. In particular, we consider the spatiotemporal patterns of material culture as an emergent effect of interaction processes acting locally. As recent research has pointed out, the spatiotemporal variability of material culture is an emergent phenomena resulting of individual and group interactions whose structure resembles those of spatially-structured complex Networks. Our results suggest that the observed global patterns could be explained by the network dynamics, specially by structural (measured as the Betweenness Centrality) and geographical position of some nodes. The appearance and disappearance of nodes in specific positions correlates with the observed changes in the pattern of material culture distribution throughout the Early Neolithic (c. 7700-6700 cal BP) in East Iberia. In our view, this could be explained by the especial role played by those nodes facilitating or limiting the information flow over the entire network. Network growth and posterior fragmentation seem to be the key drivers behind these dynamics.

10.3389/fdigh.2017.00007http://hdl.handle.net/2445/150272