Abstract
The site Zamostje 2, located in Sergiev-Posad district of Moscow (Russia) on the west bank of the Dubna River, has provided two Mesolithic and one Early Neolithic occupations dated from 7000 to 5400 cal BC. Thanks to the waterlogged environment, the site has an exceptional preservation. The site has yielded fishing screens, fishing fences, wooden fishing traps, and several small cordage remains elaborated with plant fibres, pine bark floats, fragments of paddles, and other wooden objects. In this work, we present the study of the fragments of cordage and fishing nets with the objective of providing new insights into the production and use of implements made of plant fibres. We have characterized the production process by analysing the morphological and technical characteristics by carrying out experimentation with plant fibres in order to obtain reference material to recognize them at an archaeological level. The analysis of 82 knots and 23 fragments of strings has allowed to determine that they were elaborated with single threads from 0.5 to 1.5 mm thick, which is noticeably smaller than most examples from other sites. All of them were elaborated with woody bast fibres.
1 Introduction
Plant fibres and the production of cordage were crucial for past societies, and hence, their study is essential to fully understand their organization. In the first place, we must consider the great importance that ropes have as a tool. Ropes and cords would be present in all domains of daily life: clothing, housing, hunting, fishing, and gathering, as well as in the creation of compound tools and means of transport. To produce all these objects and tools, plant fibres have been traditionally the preferred material, they are widely available, and their properties make them a very suitable material for this purpose. Only recently have these natural fibres been replaced by nylon and other modern materials in the string-making industry. Second, the ropes belong to perishable technologies (Hurcombe, 2014) made with what have been called the forgotten or missing resources. Their perishable nature means that they are only rarely preserved in the archaeological contexts and, therefore, everything related to their production is ignored, including the importance of the labour force of the social group that carries out this work, which, according to ethnography, is often made up of women and children. Therefore, in order to know and understand the economic organization of any society it is important to document all the resources exploited, and among them are the plant raw materials or fibres in cordage production and their production processes.
According to Hardy (2008) string production is a never-ending process. This author has remarked the amount of work involved in cordage production among the Wala of Papua Nueva Guinea, where string making took up well over 50% of women’s manufacturing time and 45% of all manufacturing time when men’s time was also included. String manufacture may well have been the single most time-consuming activity undertaken by the manufacturing group throughout their lives as they were completely tied to the ongoing demand for string and the need to produce. However, when it comes to archaeology, the reduced amount of string findings does not allow us to get a direct and accurate evidence of how string manufacturing was. To do so, we must turn elsewhere for help, and ethnography is one of our most reliable tools (Carr & Maslowski, 1995; Connolly, Kallenbach, & McCabe, 2017; Hardy, 2008; Kerfant, 2022; Wickens & Lowe, 2008).
Many plants can provide fibres for rope production, their availability is the main limitation for their use. In prehistoric times, some of the plant fibres more frequently documented to produce ropes are the inner bark of linden, elm, oak, juniper, and willow (Altorfer & Médard, 2000; Bender Jørgensen, 1992; Miettinen et al., 2008; Myking, Hertzberg, & Skrøppa, 2005). But it is also documented the use of fibres from the stalks of nettle (Salls, 1989), blackberry, flax, hemp, hop, reed, and willow herb (e.g., Médard, 2003; Piqué et al., 2018).
In the case of fishing societies, such as the one we study in Zamostje 2, which we will present later, cordage became a crucial tool (Myking et al., 2005), being the basis for fishing, both for hanging a hook or making a net. From an archaeological point of view, there are some fishing related tools (e.g., sink weights and hooks) dated to the Palaeolithic. However, the first evidence of fishing nets dates from the Mesolithic, with several sites where the remains of fishing nets or ropes made from raw plant materials have been recovered, such as Antrea (Carpelan, 2008; Pälsi, 1920), Narva (Kriiska, 1996), or Vis 1 (Burov, 1966). This tradition continues in the Neolithic, with findings at Sārnate in Latvia (Rimantienė, 1991), Šventoji 2B in Lithuania (Vankina, 1970), Usvyaty IV, Serteya I and Serteya II in Russia (Kolosova & Mazurkevich, 1998; Vasilyeva, 2014), Friesack 4 (Kernchen & Gramsch, 1989), or Satrup-Förstermoor in Germany (Feulner, 2012). The aim of this work is to present the technological analysis of the remains of fishing nets recovered at the site of Zamostje 2 (Russia). The fishing net remains of Zamostje 2 have been the object of previous publications, focused mainly on the morphological descriptions and contextualization (Lozovskaya, 2019; Lozovski et al., 2013). In this article, we present the technological analysis and a first approach to the raw material used for making the fishing nets. The results are contextualized in the frame of the Mesolithic fishing nets.
1.1 The Site of Zamostje 2
Zamostje 2 is an archaeological site located on the banks of the current Dubna River, about 100 km north to Moscow (Russia) (Figure 1). Since 1989, successive excavation campaigns have been carried out to establish a cultural sequence and chronology for the site. Environmental studies seem to show that in the past it was on the shore of a lake (Lozovski, Lozovskaya, Mazurkevich, Hookk, & Kolosova, 2014). The excavations have documented evidence of occupations at the riverbank as well as fishing structures in the river.

Location of the site Zamostje 2.
Thus, five levels have been identified and dated (Lozovskaya, Clemente Conte, Ershova, & Kulkova, 2020). The two first levels are attributed to the late Mesolithic, the older is dated between 6600 and 6400 cal BC and the upper one, which is where most of the archaeological materials concentrate, between 6300 and 5900 cal BC. Next, appears a level that corresponds to the Final Mesolithic (with provisional dates between 5900 and 5750 cal BC). Finally, the two upper levels correspond to an Early Neolithic (dated between 5700 and 5300 cal BC) and Middle Neolithic (ca. 4900–4300 cal BC).
The oldest four levels have an extraordinary preservation of the organic remains, due to the constant presence of water, while the upper level has remained for a period of time above the water table, and therefore many remains have deteriorated.
Thanks to the archaeological interventions, we know that the inhabitants of Zamostje 2 were engaged in economic activities based on elk and beaver hunting, as well as harvesting of wild plants, and that fishing was crucial (Lozovskaya & Lozovski, 2018). Without doubt, fishing activities played an important role: many thousands of fish remains belonging to up to 11 species have been recovered and studied (Radu & Desse-Berset, 2013). Hooks, harpoons, and traps, as well as fragments of fishing nets, are also some of the very abundant finds (Lozovski et al., 2013).
The archaeobotanical study of macroremains, wood, and charcoal has allowed the characterization of the vegetal landscape and to draw a picture of the plant resources exploited. Pollen, charcoal, and wood remains have documented the presence of woodlands in the surroundings, where riparian taxa are very well represented (Alexandrovskiy, 2018; Ershova, 2013; Ershova & Lozovskaya, 2018). In all layers the presence of Alnus sp., Salix-Populus, Tilia sp., Pinus sylvestris-nigra type, Prunus sp., Ulmus sp., Betula sp., and Acer sp. is documented. Moreover, over 3,800 remains of seeds and fruits, corresponding to 51 taxa, have been identified (Berihuete-Azorín, 2018). The results of their study show that fruits and berries were systematically gathered, and their use extends along all the occupation sequence. Regarding water plants and lakeshore species, they are ubiquitous along time, although their presence decreased over time (28 taxa in the Late Mesolithic and 12 in the Neolithic phase).
2 Materials and Methods
The knots and fibre remains were recovered in different sectors of the site during the wash-over and water sieving of sampled sediments (Figure 2). Sediments samples were taken in two different sectors of the site. One in a column of sediment from the profile, and the other near three fishing traps that were attached to vertical stakes fixed to the bottom of the river.

Plan of the excavated sectors of Zamostje 2 with location of fibre remains.
In the 2013 excavation campaign, a column of sediment was taken from one of the profiles (Test pit AA18) to obtain a high-resolution record of the archaeobotanical remains and sediments (Lozovskaya & Lozovski, 2018). This column included all the Mesolithic and Neolithic archaeological levels. Once in the laboratory, we excavated the column following the natural strata, except when the layers were too deep. In these cases, we excavated artificial layers with a thickness of 5 cm. In total, the column was divided into 25 samples. The sediment of each was processed by wash-over and the remains were recovered in sieves with a mesh size of 2 and 0.315 mm.
In addition, sediments around three fishing traps that were attached to vertical stakes fixed to the bottom of the river were also sampled. The area around the traps was characterized by additional evidence from fishing, in particular a layer of fish mummies (bones and scales in anatomical sequence), and the accumulation of large stones or net sinkers (Lozovskaya et al., 2020). In this case knots and fibres were recovered during the water sieving (5 mm) of two squares (A8′ and A9′) near the traps.
The knots of these two locations have yielded a total of 82 items, including cordage remains. An accumulation of knots was recovered near the western fishing trap located at the contact of the two layers of Late Mesolithic (LM-UL) and Early Neolithic (EN) on squares A8′ (50 specimens) and A9′ (6 specimens). In the case of the Test pit AA18 26 knots and various fibre remnants were found, as well as a piece of rope with two strings. Seven knots were found in the Neolithic layer, the rest (19) were associated with deposits of the upper Late Mesolithic layer.
The aim of the technological analysis was to determine the number of strands and the direction of the torsion of the fibres and strands (Hurley, 1979). Moreover, the type of knotting of the fishing nets has been analysed. This analysis is based in previous proposals (e.g., Lozovskaya, 2019) and in our own experimental materials described below. The first stage of experiments aimed at creating a working reference base for determining the material and plausible processes from which the nets were made. That included the preparation of plant fibres from fresh and dry nettle, dry fireweed (Chamaenerion angustifolium) stems, soaked linden bast, willow bark boiled in ashes, and fresh hops (Humulus lupulus). For visual comparison, single and twisted double thin threads were obtained experimentally (Figure 3) and sheet bend knots were made (Figure 4).

Strings produced with (a) nettle, (b) linden, (c) willow, and (d) fireweed.

Knots produced with experimental strings made of willow (left) and nettle (right).
Taxonomical identification of raw materials used in knots and cords production was based on the microscopic observation of the anatomical features of fibres. A transmitted light bright field–dark field (BF–DF) is usually used to observe the appearance, shape, and anatomical features of fibres when the samples are relatively consistent. This is possible when they are conserved by dehydration or carbonization. In the case of Zamostje 2, the samples were preserved by waterlogging so the use of this type of microscope was not as resolutive as thought, as the transferred light reflects, and no specific features were visible. The rapid drying of the materials was damaging, so this procedure was discarded. Then, thin sections of two samples (a knot and a cord) were made in radial, transversal, and tangential directions to visualize the samples under a reflected light microscopy Olympus BX51 linked to an Olympus DP26 camera and using the Olympus cellSens software. The visualized features were compared with modern specimens as reference material and specialized literature (Schweingruber, Börner, & Schulze, 2011a,b).
3 Results
3.1 Morphological and Technical Characteristics
The general characteristics of the findings clearly point out towards being a part of fishing nets. Due to preservation constrains, in general only the places where the strands were knotted have been retrieved (Figure 5). However, four of them preserved very short pieces of strings attached (up to 3.5 mm). The knots are small-sized, ranging from 2.3 × 2.1 (No. 106) to 6 × 4.5 mm (No. 6), but on average, they have 3–4 mm.

Detail of some archaeological knots.
According to the number of strands, two types of knots have been identified. Most of the knots consist of two single strands (67%) with straight (Figure 6a) or slightly twisted fibres (Figure 6b). The strands have a thickness of 0.3–1.5 mm, on an average 0.7–1.2 mm. Straight single fibres are the most common (64%) although some of them show a weak S twist. Some two stranded plied string fragments have also been recovered (Figure 6c). In fact, 19 knots have two double strands and almost all of them present an S twist.

Fibres from Zamostje 2: (a) straight fibres, (b) slightly twisted fibres, and (c) two-strand cord.
In Prehistory we find a variety of solutions applied to net-making. The nets from Antrea Korpilahti (Finland) were made of double strands with a S twist (Pälsi, 1920, p. 16, Taf. V; Carpelan, 2008, p. 99). In contrast, for the fishing net from Peat Bog Vis 1 (Burov, 1966, p. 162, Figure 5), the unique knotted fishing net from Friesack 4 (layer 23) (Kernchen & Gramsch, 1989, p. 24, Taf. 6.1,2) and the net from Satrup-Förstermoor (Feulner, 2012, p. 168) they used strings, 1.5–2 mm thick, twisted in the Z direction from strands with an S twist (ssZ).
Regarding the knot type, almost all identifiable knots (68 specimens) correspond to the type “sheet bend” (Figure 7). This knot is traditionally used in net making (netting) up to the present day (von Brandt, 1984). Also known as fisherman’s knot, it has been recorded as the main technique for weaving fishing nets since the ninth millennium cal BC. For instance, the above-mentioned Antrea net, the oldest net found, dated to the Mesolithic (ca. 9300–9200 BP), also displays this knot (Pälsi, 1920, p. 16, Abb. 7; Carpelan, 2008, pp. 99–100, Figure 5.13). The Vis I net was also woven by this knot, traced in 14 cases (Burov, 1966, p. 162, Figure 5). The six remaining knots are of other types, possibly used to tie together, for example, floats or weights, or to hold threads together.

Variety of sheet bend knots identified at Zamostje 2. Drawing by O. Lozovskaya.
The choice of plant species for comparison with Zamostje 2 fibres is associated with the identification of their presence at the site in the Mesolithic–Neolithic periods through different archaeobotanical proxies. Since fireweed and hops have not been yet identified, special attention has been paid to linden, willow, and nettle as source of raw materials. From the finished fibres, thin single and double twisted threads with a thickness of about 1 mm were obtained. Simple sheet bends were made from threads. In visual comparison, knots of a single weakly twisted willow thread (slightly smaller from nettle) seem to have the greatest similarity with archaeological specimens, although rare knots with a single double twisted thread are also present.
In addition, some fragments of cordage have also been recovered. Three of the fragments have 2–3 cm long and are made of threads of 1.2–1.9 and 3 mm in thickness. Other 18 are S-twist threads of a large rope, each thread 2–3 mm thick. This second type of strings presents torsion in both directions, Z and S. All these remains are found in the Final Mesolithic layer, which dates back to ca. 5850–5700 cal BC, but their specific adscription is unclear. Another two additional remains of cordage come from the Neolithic horizon of Test pit AA18.
3.2 Plant Material Identification
Identification of plant fibres is a major challenge in archaeobotanical research, very few times it is possible to determine the taxa due to the lack of reference collections and the loss of features that allow the taxonomic identification as a consequence of processing. However, the analysis of a sample of a bigger rope dated to the Final Mesolithic, carried out by Prof. M. Kolosova, documented the use of willow bast (Lozovskaya & Lozovski, 2018).
In contrast, the analysis of fragments of cordage from the Neolithic levels unfortunately, did not permit the specific adscription of the materials with certainty due to the unsatisfactory preservation of the plant fibres. Notwithstanding, the microscopic observation of plant fibres allowed to identify some anatomical features. In radial section, vessels have distinct spiral thickenings (Figure 8a); moreover, it has been possible to identify ray cells (Figure 8b). Cross-sections presented a strong deformation with respect to the shape of the vessels; however, the samples show small vessels (Figure 8c). Finally, tangential section was quite degraded, and no rays were observed. The bad state of preservation impeded a further adscription to a particular taxon, but the anatomical features observed are coherent with a dicotyledonous family.

Optical microscopy images showing raw materials features: (a) spiral thickenings in vessels in radial section, (b) ray cells in radial section, (c) cross-section deformation (string samples), and (d) spiral thickenings in vessels (knot samples).
With respect to the knots, only one sample has been analysed. As in the case of cordage, the state the conservation of the fibres is poor, and a taxonomical identification was not possible. In Figure 8d spiral thickenings in vessels are visible as in the case of the twisted fibres mentioned before. The anatomical features are also consistent with dicotyledonous features.
4 Discussion
Considering their distributions at the site (Test pit AA18 and the fishing zone with fishing traps) the knots are probably part of different fishing nets. The knots in the test pit were distributed over several archaeological layers: seven knots were found in the Neolithic layer, the rest (19) were associated with deposits of the upper Late Mesolithic layer. In contrast, the knots associated with the fishing traps were concentrated in a small area of one stratigraphic horizon, what allows us to assume that they originate from the same fishing net. The radiocarbon date of 7087 ± 45 BP (Ua-50259)/6052–5885 cal BC (Lozovskaya, 2019) obtained for two knots (Nos. 13 and 21, both poorly preserved and disintegrated) corresponds to the period of the Final Mesolithic, accompanied by transgression of the reservoir. The distribution of the knots along all the chronological sequence confirms the continuity of fishing practices during long time, as well as the same tradition in the techniques of net making.
The nets recovered at Zamostje 2 are clearly associated to fishing activities. Besides the remains of the fishing nets in the site a significant number of fish remains of at least 11 species have been recovered, the most important of which were Esox lucius, Perca fluviatilis, Rutilus sp., Carassius carassius, and Leuciscus idus (Radu & Desse-Berset, 2013). Moreover, different archaeological materials related to fishing have been documented, among them are fishing hooks, harpoon heads, barbed points, fish scaling knives made of elk ribs, paddles, and bark floats. Finally, we should mention the stationary fishing structures made of wood and represented by fish traps, screens, and fences (Lozovski et al., 2013).
The use of fishing nets made of plant fibres was widespread among Mesolithic and Neolithic north European groups. They were documented at Antrea (Carpelan, 2008; Pälsi, 1920), Narva (Kriiska, 1996), Vis 1 (Burov 1966), Usvyaty IV, Friesack 4 (Kernchen & Gramsch, 1989), or Satrup-Förstermoor (Feulner, 2012).
The nets of Zamostje 2 are similar to those documented at Antrea or Vis I with respect to the type of knot. Concerning the employed raw materials, a variety of them have been identified for other archaeological cases, being usually species that are widely available in the local landscape. Some examples are the Antrea Korpilahti net, where multistage studies were carried out to finally identify the material as willow bark bast (Miettinen, 2008, pp. 83–84). On another note, the raw material for the net in Vis 1 consisted of twisted roots and leaves of sedge, according to the definition of Prof. S.N. Tyuremnov (Burov, 1966, p. 162), while the Förstermoor net, according to F. Föllner, was made of nettle fibres, like a similar rope from the Early Neolithic Kongsted site (Feulner, 2012, pp. 168–169; Hartz & Kraus, 2009, p. 218). Finally, a knotless net from Sventoji 2B was woven from nettle fibres (Rimantienė, 1991, p. 74, Figure 2). At the Neolithic settlement of Usvyaty IV, the use of juniper roots is supposed, and at Serteya II, blueberry (Vaccinum sp.) rhizomes (Kolosova & Mazurkevich, 1998, p. 54). At the same time, new finds of wickerwork at Serteya II also showed the standard use of willow fibres (Vasilyeva, 2014, pp. 233–235).
With respect to the fibres used in net production in Europe only few times have been identified and mainly general attributions to the type of fibre or genus have been done. However, several plants have been recognized: the net of Antrea was identified as willow bast (Bender Jørgensen, 1992, p. 93), in the case of Wis‐Moor I the plant used was a type of Carex (Bender Jørgensen, 2013, p. 359), bast was used in Friesack 4, Germany (Bender Jørgensen, 1992), bast of willow or poplar in Tybrind Vig, Denmark. Bast of trees is usually identified as raw material, but other plant parts, such as stalks and leaves were also used for this purpose. For the manufacture of nets in the past some of the most frequent plants were willow branches, linden bark, and stalks of nettle (Rimantienė, 1991, pp. 72–73).
The species used in Zamostje 2 have so far not been identified but based on the species recorded by palynology (Ershova & Lozovskaya, 2018), charcoal analysis (Alexandrovskiy, 2018) and plant macroremains (Berihuete-Azorín, 2018) of many different species were available for obtaining fibres. In fact, a variety of possible plant fibres grew in the surroundings, among them were nettles, sedges, blackberries, willow, raspberry, and lime bark. Hemp and flax appeared in this area later and have not been found within the remaining archaeobotanical assemblage (Berihuete-Azorín, 2018).
Regarding the used techniques, our aim was learning which techniques were involved, to assess possible changes along time. The purpose of knots is to tie together a piece of string, cord, or rope. This bonding can be performed in many ways, responding to a variety of necessities, and resulting in different shapes and strength qualities. Knots have been a basic advance, allowing to further develop in the construction of tools and implements. In the case of Zamostje 2, we have already explained that the fibres used are slightly twisted, and most of the remains correspond to the knots that had formed the net. As explained before, the main type for all periods is the sheet bend knot. In fact, this is coherent with the historical evolution of fishing nets making, the materials have been changing over time, but this type of knot is still employed nowadays for the same purpose. Its main advantages are that it is fast to tie, allows to join two ropes or strings of different diameters, does not slip under load, on the contrary, it gets stronger when more pressure is applied, and it is also easily untied if needed.
Finally, concerning the experimentally created knots, they were helpful to get a better understanding of how the work with those kinds of fibres was. In the future, different types of plant processing such as maceration of fat or retting with water will be undertaken and recording of changes in the microstructure of the fibres will be documented.
5 Conclusions
Strings and ropes must have been of great importance for the fishing, hunting, and gathering societies, in which the demand for this material had to be constant. Therefore, one would have to imagine that its elaboration would involve a significant part of the labour investment of some people in the group, or perhaps of specialized groups within a society. For a fishing society like this whose economical activities are represented at Zamostje 2, string was a key tool and therefore, string production should constitute a very important activity. Its character makes it a very time-consuming activity, which involves a large investment of work, energy, and time. The demand for this material was so big, that it is thought that string production should constitute a daily or quotidian activity. We would like to insist the importance of studying this type of material, despite all the difficulties that have been glimpsed, since both technical and botanical information are crucial for understanding the economy of a particular group of people.
In the case of Zamostje 2, the study of the fibres and knots has allowed to determine similarities with other prehistoric societies with respect to the net production technique, as is the case of Antrea or Vis I. Moreover, this study confirms the continuity in the net production technique for long time, as the type of knot documented has continuity until modern times. Unfortunately, the raw material could not be determined beyond a rough classification of dicotyledonous plant, which imped to go further for the moment with respect to the plant used.
The research in Zamostje 2 also demonstrates the necessity of accurate methods of sampling and recovering of plant remains. Likewise, it is important to improve plant identification protocols and methods, especially regarding manufactures such as fibre artifacts.
Acknowledgements
M. Berihuete-Azorín is hosted at IPHES from the Generalitat de Catalunya CERCA Programme, as a member of the 2017-SGR-836 Group. M. Herrero-Otal and R. Piqué are members of the 2017-SGR-243 group by Agència de Gestió dels Ajuts Universitaris i Recerca (AGAUR), Generalitat de Catalunya.
-
Funding information: O.L. was funded by the Program of FSR SAS no FMZF-2022-0012. M.B.-A. is currently funded by a MSCA-IF-2019 (GA No. 893735) and during part of this research was an Alexander von Humboldt post-doc fellow. R.P. was funded by ICREA Academia Program.
-
Author contributions: M.B.-A.: collection, analysis, interpretation of data, writing the paper, and decision to submit it for publication; O.L.: excavation collection, analysis, interpretation of data, writing the paper, and decision to submit it for publication; M.H.-O. and R.P.: analysis, interpretation of data, writing the paper, and decision to submit it for publication.
-
Conflict of interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest. M.B.-A. is a member of Open Archaeology’s Editorial Board. She was not, however, involved in the review process of this article. It was handled entirely by other editors of the journal.
-
Data availability statement: The datasets generated and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
References
Alexandrovskiy, A. (2018). The first results of the trees species determination on the charcoal from the Mesolithic layers. Zamostje 2. In O. Lozovskaya & V. Lozovski (Eds.), Site Zamostje 2 and Landscape evolution in the Volga-Oka region during the Holocene (pp. 49–53). St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS.10.31600/978-5-9909872-8-9-2018-49-53Suche in Google Scholar
Altorfer, K., & Médard, F. (2000). Nouvelles découvertes textiles sur le site de Wetzikon-Robenhausen (Zürich, Suisse). Sondages 1999. In D. Cardon & M. Feugère (Eds.), Archéologie des textiles, des origines au Ve siècle. Actes du colloque de Lattes, octobre 1999. Monographies instrumentum, vol 14. (pp. 35–75). Montagnac: Mergoil.Suche in Google Scholar
Bender Jørgensen, L. (1992). North European textiles until AD 1000. København, Aarhus: University Press.Suche in Google Scholar
Bender Jørgensen, L. (2013). The textile remains from Tybrind Vig. In S. H. Andersen (Ed.), Tybrind Vig. Submerged Mesolithic settlements in Denmark. Höjbjerg: Jutland Archaeological Society, Mosegård Museum.Suche in Google Scholar
Berihuete-Azorín, M. (2018). First results of the archaeobotanical study of the Test pit 2 profile column. In Site Zamostje 2 and landscape evolution in the Volga-Oka region during the Holocene (pp. 41–48). Saint-Petersburg: IHMC RAS. doi: 10.31600/978-5-9909872-8-9-2018-41-48.Suche in Google Scholar
Burov, G. M. (1966). Archaeological finds in old peat bogs of the Vychegda basin. Soviet Archaeology, 1, 155–173.Suche in Google Scholar
Carpelan, C. (2008). On the history and recent studies of the ‘Antrea Net Find’. In M. Lavento (Ed.), Karelian Isthmus – Stone Age Studies in 1998–2003 (pp. 88–127). Helsinki, Iskos.Suche in Google Scholar
Carr, C., & Maslowski, R. F. (1995). Cordage and fabrics: Relating form, technology and social processes. In C. Carr & J. E. Neitzel (Eds.), Style, society and person (pp. 297–343). New York: Plenum Press. Archaeological and Ethnological perspectives.10.1007/978-1-4899-1097-4_9Suche in Google Scholar
Connolly, T. J., Kallenbach, E. A., & McCabe, S. J. (2017). Netting in the Northern and Western Great Basin. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology, 37(2), 143–167.Suche in Google Scholar
Ershova, E., & Lozovskaya, O. (2018). Paleoenvironment of Mesolithic and Neolithic settlements at Zamostje 2 according to botanical and pollen analysis. In O. Lozovskaya & V. Lozovski (Eds.), Site Zamostje 2 and landscape evolution in the Volga-Oka region during the Holocene (pp. 31–40). St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS.10.31600/978-5-9909872-8-9-2018-31-40Suche in Google Scholar
Ershova, E. G. (2013). Results of the botanical and pollen analysis. In V. Lozovski, O. Lozovskaya, & I. Clemente Conte (Eds.), Zamostje 2. Lake settlement of the mesolithic and neolithic fisherman in Upper Volga region (pp. 182–193). St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS. doi: 10.13140/RG.2.1.4657.6487.Suche in Google Scholar
Feulner, F. (2012). Evidence of fishing in the Satrup bog, Kr. Schleswig-Flensburg, Germany. Quartär, 59, 165–174. doi: 10.7485/QU59_7.Suche in Google Scholar
Hardy, K. (2008). Prehistoric string theory. How twisted fibres helped to shape the world. Antiquity, 82(316), 271–280. doi: 10.1017/S0003598X00096794.Suche in Google Scholar
Hartz, S., & Kraus, H. (2009). Fischfang in der Ertebølle-Kultur. Beispiele von Küsten- und Inlandsiedlungen Schleswig-Holsteins. In U. Müller, S. Kleingärtner, & F. Huber (Eds.), Zwischen Nord- und Ostsee 1997–2007. Zehn Jahre Arbeitsgruppe für maritime und limnische Archäologie (AMLA) in Schleswig-Holstein (pp. 209–224). Bonn: Verlag Dr. Rudolf Habelt GMBL.Suche in Google Scholar
Hurcombe, L. (2014). Perishable material culture in prehistory. Investigating the missing majority. London: Routledge.10.4324/9781315817729Suche in Google Scholar
Hurley, W. M. (1979). Prehistoric cordage: Identification of impressions of pottery. Washington: Taraxacum.Suche in Google Scholar
Kerfant, C. E. (2022). Ropes and baskets: Case studies from Lanyu, southern Taiwan and the Batanes, northern Philippine islands. In M. Berihuete-Azorín, M. Martín Seijo, O. López Bultó, & R. Piqué (Eds.), The missing Woodlands. Archaeobotanical studies of the use of plant raw materials (pp. 123–152). Barkhuis.10.2307/j.ctv23wf366.11Suche in Google Scholar
Kernchen, I., & Gramsch, B. (1989). Mesolithische Netz- und Seilreste von Friesack, Bezirk Potsdamn und ihre Konservierung. Veroffentlichungen des Museums für Ur- und Frühgeschichte Potsdam. Bd. 23, 23–28.Suche in Google Scholar
Kolosova, M. Y., & Mazurkevich, A. N. (1998). Identification of wooden objects according to the signs of the anatomical structure of wood from the Neolithic peat-bog sites of the Lovat’-Dvina interfluve./B: Settlements: environment, culture, society. Materials of the thematic scientific conference, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, October 6–9, 1998 (pp. 52–56). St. Petersburg.Suche in Google Scholar
Kriiska, A. (1996). Stone Age settlements in the lower reaches of the Narva River, North-eastern Estonia. PACT, 51, 359–169.Suche in Google Scholar
Lozovskaya, O. (2019). On the use of fishing nets at the Zamostje 2 site. Prehistoric Archaeology. Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 1, 108–124. doi: 10.31600/2658-3925-2019-1-108-124.Suche in Google Scholar
Lozovskaya, O., Clemente Conte, I., Ershova, E., & Kulkova, M. (2020). Subsistence strategies on the Late Mesolithic and Early Neolithic lake settlement Zamostje 2 in Volga-Oka region: Evidences of fishing. Quaternary International, 541, 74–88, doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2019.11.021.Suche in Google Scholar
Lozovskaya, O., & Lozovski, V. (Eds.). (2018). Site Zamostje 2 and Landscape evolution in the Volga-Oka region during the Holocene. St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS.10.31600/978-5-9909872-8-9-2018Suche in Google Scholar
Lozovski, V. M., Lozovskaya, O., Clemente-Conte, I., Maigrot, Y., Gyria, E. Y., Radu, V., … Gassiot Ballbè, E. (2013). Fishing in the late Mesolithic and early Neolithic of the Russian plain: The case of site Zamostje 2. In V. Lozovski, O. Lozovskaya, & I. Clemente Conte (Eds.), Zamostje 2. Lake Settlement of the Mesolithic and Neolithic Fisherman in Upper Volga Region (pp. 18–45). St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS, P.Suche in Google Scholar
Lozovski, V., Lozovskaya, O., Mazurkevich, A., Hookk, D., & Kolosova, M. (2014). Late mesolithic–Early neolithic human adaptation to environmental changes at an ancient lake shore: The multi-layer Zamostje 2 site, Dubna River floodplain, Central Russia. Quaternary International, 324, 146–161. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2013.12.060.Suche in Google Scholar
Médard, F. (2003). Vestiges textiles et activités de filage sur le site néolithique d’Arbon-Bleiche 3 (TG Suisse). Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française, 100(2), 375–391. doi: 10.3406/bspf.2003.12874.Suche in Google Scholar
Miettinen, A., Sarmaja-Korjonen, K., Sonninen, E., Jungner, H., Lempiäinen, T., Ylikoski, K., … Mäkiaho, J. -P. (2008). The palaeoenvironment of the’Antrea net find’. In M. Lavento (Ed.), Karelian Isthmus – Stone Age Studies in 1998–2003 (vol. 16, pp. 71–87). Helsinki, Iskos.Suche in Google Scholar
Myking, T., Hertzberg, A., & Skrøppa, T. (2005). History, manufacture and properties of lime bast cordage in northern Europe. Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research, 78(1), 65–71. doi: 10.1093/forestry/cpi006.Suche in Google Scholar
Pälsi, S. (1920). Ein steinzeitlicher Moorfund bei Korpilahti im Kirchspiel Antrea, Län Viborg. Suomen Muinaismuistoyhdistyksen Aikakauskirja (SMYA). Helsinki, XXVIII(2), 3–19.Suche in Google Scholar
Piqué, R., Romero-Brugués, S., Palomo, A., Tarrús, J., Terradas, X., & Bogdanovic, I. (2018). The production and use of cordage in the early Neolithic site of La Draga (Banyoles, Spain). Quaternary International, 468, 262–270. doi: 10.1016/j.quaint.2016.05.024.Suche in Google Scholar
Radu, V., & Desse-Berset, N. (2013). Fish and fishing at the site of Zamostje 2. In V. Lozovski, O. Lozovskaya, & I. Clemente Conte (Eds.), Zamostje 2. Lake Settlement of the Mesolithic and Neolithic Fisherman in Upper Volga Region (pp. 194–213). St. Petersbourg: IHMC RAS.Suche in Google Scholar
Rimantienė, R. (1991). Lake fishing and sea hunting in the Stone Age of Lithuania. In Fishing and seafaring in the Mesolithic - Early Metal period in the forest and forest-steppe zone of Eastern Europe (pp. 65–86). Leningrad: Nauka.Suche in Google Scholar
Salls, R. A. (1989). To catch a fish: Some limitations on prehistoric fishing in southern California with special reference to Native plant fibre fishing line. Journal of Ethnobiology, 9(2), 173–199.Suche in Google Scholar
Schweingruber, F. H., Börner, A., & Schulze, E. D. (2011a). Atlas of stem anatomy in herbs, shrubs and trees (vol. 1). Berlin: Springer-Verlag.10.1007/978-3-642-11638-4_1Suche in Google Scholar
Schweingruber, F. H., Börner, A., & Schulze, E. D. (2011b). Atlas of stem anatomy in herbs, shrubs and trees (vol. 2). Berlin: Springer-Verlag.10.1007/978-3-642-11638-4Suche in Google Scholar
Vankina, L. V. (1970). Peat-bog site Sarnate. Riga: Zinatne.Suche in Google Scholar
Vasilyeva, N. A. (2014). On the problem of preservation of archaeological artefacts made of plant fibers (based on the materials of the site Serteya II. In A. N. Mazurkevich, M. E. Polkovnikova, & E. V. Dolbunova (Eds.), Archeology of lake settlements IV-II millennium BC: Chronology of cultures, environment and paleoclimatic rhythms (pp. 232–237). St. Petersburg: Periphery.Suche in Google Scholar
von Brandt, A. (1984). Fish catching methods of the world. Fishing News Books. UK: Farnham.Suche in Google Scholar
Wickens, G. E., & Lowe, P. (2008). The Baobabs: Pachycauls of Africa, Madagascar and Australia. Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4020-6431-9.Suche in Google Scholar
© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Regular Articles
- A 2D Geometric Morphometric Assessment of Chrono-Cultural Trends in Osseous Barbed Points of the European Final Palaeolithic and Early Mesolithic
- Wealth Consumption, Sociopolitical Organization, and Change: A Perspective from Burial Analysis on the Middle Bronze Age in the Carpathian Basin
- Everything Has a Role to Play: Reconstruction of Vessel Function From Early Copper Age Graves in the Upper Tisza Region (Eastern Hungary)
- Urban Success and Urban Adaptation Over the Long Run
- Exploring Hypotheses on Early Holocene Caspian Seafaring Through Personal Ornaments: A Study of Changing Styles and Symbols in Western Central Asia
- Victims of Heritage Crimes: Aspects of Legal and Socio-Economic Justice
- On the (Non-)Scalability of Target Media for Evaluating the Performance of Ancient Projectile Weapons
- Small Houses of the Dead: A Model of Collective Funerary Activity in the Chalcolithic Tombs of Southwestern Iberia. La Orden-Seminario Site (Huelva, Spain)
- Bigger Fish to Fry: Evidence (or Lack of) for Fish Consumption in Ancient Syracuse (Sicily)
- Terminal Ballistics of Stone-Tipped Atlatl Darts and Arrows: Results From Exploratory Naturalistic Experiments
- First Archaeological Record of the Torture and Mutilation of Indigenous Mapuche During the “War of Arauco,” Sixteenth Century
- The Story of the Architectural Documentation of Hagia Sophia’s Hypogeum
- Iconographic Trends in Roman Imperial Coinage in the Context of Societal Changes in the Second and Third Centuries CE: A Small-Scale Test of the Affluence Hypothesis
- Circular Economy in the Roman Period and the Early Middle Ages – Methods of Analysis for a Future Agenda
- New Insights Into the Water Management System at Tetzcotzinco, Mexico
- How Linguistic Data Can Inform Archaeological Investigations: An Australian Pilot Study Around Combustion Features
- Leadership in the Emergent Baekje State: State Formation in Central-Western Korea (ca. 200–400 CE)
- Middle Bronze Age Settlement in Czeladź Wielka – The Next Step Toward Determining the Habitation Model, Chronology, and Pottery of the Silesian-Greater Poland Tumulus Culture
- On Class and Elitism in Archaeology
- Archaeology of the Late Local Landscapes of the Hualfín Valley (Catamarca, Argentina): A Political Perspective from Cerro Colorado of La Ciénaga de Abajo
- Review Article
- The State of the Debate: Nuragic Metal Trade in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age
- A Review of Malta’s Pre-Temple Neolithic Pottery Wares
- Commentary Article
- Paradise Found or Common Sense Lost? Göbekli Tepe’s Last Decade as a Pre-Farming Cult Centre
- Special Issue Published in Cooperation with Meso’2020 – Tenth International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, edited by Thomas Perrin, Benjamin Marquebielle, Sylvie Philibert, and Nicolas Valdeyron - Part II
- The Time of the Last Hunters: Chronocultural Aspects of Early Holocene Societies in the Western Mediterranean
- Fishing Nets and String at the Final Mesolithic and Early Neolithic Site of Zamostje 2, Sergiev Posad (Russia)
- Investigating the Early-to-Late Mesolithic Transition in Northeastern Italy: A Multifaceted Regional Perspective
- Socioeconomic, Technological, and Cultural Adaptation of the Mesolithic Population in Central-Eastern Cantabria (Spain) in the Early and Middle Holocene
- From Coastal Sites to Elevated Hinterland Locations in the Mesolithic – Discussing Human–Woodland Interaction in the Oslo Fjord Region, Southeast Norway
- Exploitation of Osseous Materials During the Mesolithic in the Iron Gates
- Motorways of Prehistory? Boats, Rivers and Moving in Mesolithic Ireland
- Environment and Plant Use at La Tourasse (South-West France) at the Late Glacial–Holocene Transition
- Stylistic Study of the Late Mesolithic Industries in Western France: Combined Principal Coordinate Analysis and Use-Wear Analysis
- Mesolithic Occupations During the Boreal Climatic Fluctuations at La Baume de Monthiver (Var, France)
- Pressure Flakers of Late Neolithic Forest Hunter-Gatherer-Fishers of Eastern Europe and Their Remote Counterparts
- The Site Groß Fredenwalde, NE-Germany, and the Early Cemeteries of Northern Europe
- Special Issue on Archaeology of Migration: Moving Beyond Historical Paradigms, edited by Catharine Judson & Hagit Nol
- The Blurry Third Millennium. “Neolithisation” in a Norwegian Context
- Movement or Diaspora? Understanding a Multigenerational Puebloan and Ndee Community on the Central Great Plains
- Human Mobility and the Spread of Innovations – Case Studies from Neolithic Central and Southeast Europe
- The Thule Migration: A Culture in a Hurry?
- The Transformation of Domes in Medieval Chinese Mosques: From Immigrant Muslims to Local Followers
- Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
- Arab Migration During Early Islam: The Seventh to Eighth Century AD from an Archaeological Perspective
- Special Issue on Ancient Cultural Routes: Past Transportations Infrastructures as a Two-Way Interaction Between Society and Environment, edited by Francesca Fulminante, Francesca Mazzilli & Franziska Engelbogen
- The Impact of Transportation on Pottery Industries in Roman Britain
- The Role of the Road in Settling a Mountainous Region
- An Example of Geographic Network Analysis: The Case Study of the Fortore Valley (Molise and Apulia, Italy)
- Water, Communication, Sight, and the Location of Fortifications on the Strata Diocletiana (Syria) in Late Antiquity
- Transport, Interaction, and Connectivity
- Special Issue on Scales of Interaction in the Bronze and Iron Age Central Mediterranean, edited by Emily Holt & Davide Schirru
- Tracing Mobility Patterns of Buried Species of the Late Iron Age Funerary Staggered Turriform of Son Ferrer (Calvià, Spain)
- Approaching Interaction in Iron Age Sardinia: Multi-Scalar Survey Evidence from the Sinis Archaeological Project and the Progetto S’Urachi
- From the Atlantic to the Mediterranean and Back: Sardinia, Iberia, and the Transfer of Knowledge in Late Bronze Age Networks
- Special Issue on Bricks Under the Scope: Microscopic and Macroscopic Approaches to the Study of Earthen Architecture, edited by Marta Lorenzon, Moritz Kinzel, & Benjamín Cutillas-Victoria
- Earthen Architecture in Nordic Countries: Future Directions
- Earthen Architecture and Craft Practices of Early Iron Age Ramparts: Geoarchaeological Analysis of Villares de la Encarnación, South-Eastern Iberia
- Earthen Architecture in Southern Algeria: An Assessment of Social Values and the Impact of Industrial Building Practices
- Studying the Use of Earth in Early Architecture of Southwest and Central Asia
- Roof Tiles and Bricks of the Etruscan Domus dei Dolia (Vetulonia, Italy): An Archaeological and Archaeometric Study of Construction Materials
- The Building Blocks of Circular Economies: Rethinking Prehistoric Turf Architecture Through Archaeological and Architectural Analysis
- Undecorated Roman-Period Roof Tiles – An Old Material Providing New Results
- Turf Building in Iceland – Past, Present, and Future
- Special Issue on Past Sounds: New Perspectives in the Field of Archaeoacoustics, edited by Margarita Díaz-Andreu & Neemias Santos da Rosa
- Employing Psychoacoustics in Sensory Archaeology: Developments at the Ancient Sanctuary of Zeus on Mount Lykaion
- One, Two, Three! Can Everybody Hear Me? Acoustics of Roman Contiones. Case Studies of the Capitoline Hill and the Temple of Bellona in Rome
- Ringing Tone and Drumming Sages in the Crevice Cave of Pirunkirkko, Koli, Finland
- Music and Storytelling at Rock Art Sites? The Archaeoacoustics of the Urkosh Area (Russian Altai)
- Listening in Sacred Spaces: The Sanctuary of Poseidonia and Selinunte’s Main Urban Sanctuary
- Presenting Archaeoacoustics Results Using Multimedia and VR Technologies
- Special Issue on Reconsidering the Chaîne Opératoire: Towards a Multifaceted Approach to the Archaeology of Techniques, edited by Marie-Elise Porqueddu, Claudia Sciuto & Anaïs Lamesa
- Reconsidering the Chaîne Opératoire: At the Crossroad Between People and Materials
- Materiality of Plaster Vessels: The Problem of Southwest Asian Neolithic White Ware
- The Chaîne Opératoire Approach for Interpreting Personal Ornament Production: Marble Beads in Copper Age Tuscany (Italy)
- Seriality and Individualization: Carving the Fluted Sarcophagi from Hierapolis of Phrygia
- Making Vessels for the Dead: Pottery-Making Practices, Chaîne Opératoire and the Use of Grog (Crushed Sherds) as a Technological and Cultural Choice during Late and Inca Periods in the Northwestern Argentine Region (Southern Andes)
- An Invention Shading Light to the Socio-History of Bonneuil Quarry Basin: The Roadheaders with Rotating Drill Bits
- The Ugly Duckling: Understanding the Making of an Early Copper Age Atypical Ceramic Vessel from the Great Hungarian Plain
- Synopsis of a Treasure. A Transdisciplinary Study of Medieval Gold Workings Biographies
- Identification of Ceramic Traditions on the Prehistoric Mines of Gavà (Barcelona, Spain)
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Regular Articles
- A 2D Geometric Morphometric Assessment of Chrono-Cultural Trends in Osseous Barbed Points of the European Final Palaeolithic and Early Mesolithic
- Wealth Consumption, Sociopolitical Organization, and Change: A Perspective from Burial Analysis on the Middle Bronze Age in the Carpathian Basin
- Everything Has a Role to Play: Reconstruction of Vessel Function From Early Copper Age Graves in the Upper Tisza Region (Eastern Hungary)
- Urban Success and Urban Adaptation Over the Long Run
- Exploring Hypotheses on Early Holocene Caspian Seafaring Through Personal Ornaments: A Study of Changing Styles and Symbols in Western Central Asia
- Victims of Heritage Crimes: Aspects of Legal and Socio-Economic Justice
- On the (Non-)Scalability of Target Media for Evaluating the Performance of Ancient Projectile Weapons
- Small Houses of the Dead: A Model of Collective Funerary Activity in the Chalcolithic Tombs of Southwestern Iberia. La Orden-Seminario Site (Huelva, Spain)
- Bigger Fish to Fry: Evidence (or Lack of) for Fish Consumption in Ancient Syracuse (Sicily)
- Terminal Ballistics of Stone-Tipped Atlatl Darts and Arrows: Results From Exploratory Naturalistic Experiments
- First Archaeological Record of the Torture and Mutilation of Indigenous Mapuche During the “War of Arauco,” Sixteenth Century
- The Story of the Architectural Documentation of Hagia Sophia’s Hypogeum
- Iconographic Trends in Roman Imperial Coinage in the Context of Societal Changes in the Second and Third Centuries CE: A Small-Scale Test of the Affluence Hypothesis
- Circular Economy in the Roman Period and the Early Middle Ages – Methods of Analysis for a Future Agenda
- New Insights Into the Water Management System at Tetzcotzinco, Mexico
- How Linguistic Data Can Inform Archaeological Investigations: An Australian Pilot Study Around Combustion Features
- Leadership in the Emergent Baekje State: State Formation in Central-Western Korea (ca. 200–400 CE)
- Middle Bronze Age Settlement in Czeladź Wielka – The Next Step Toward Determining the Habitation Model, Chronology, and Pottery of the Silesian-Greater Poland Tumulus Culture
- On Class and Elitism in Archaeology
- Archaeology of the Late Local Landscapes of the Hualfín Valley (Catamarca, Argentina): A Political Perspective from Cerro Colorado of La Ciénaga de Abajo
- Review Article
- The State of the Debate: Nuragic Metal Trade in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age
- A Review of Malta’s Pre-Temple Neolithic Pottery Wares
- Commentary Article
- Paradise Found or Common Sense Lost? Göbekli Tepe’s Last Decade as a Pre-Farming Cult Centre
- Special Issue Published in Cooperation with Meso’2020 – Tenth International Conference on the Mesolithic in Europe, edited by Thomas Perrin, Benjamin Marquebielle, Sylvie Philibert, and Nicolas Valdeyron - Part II
- The Time of the Last Hunters: Chronocultural Aspects of Early Holocene Societies in the Western Mediterranean
- Fishing Nets and String at the Final Mesolithic and Early Neolithic Site of Zamostje 2, Sergiev Posad (Russia)
- Investigating the Early-to-Late Mesolithic Transition in Northeastern Italy: A Multifaceted Regional Perspective
- Socioeconomic, Technological, and Cultural Adaptation of the Mesolithic Population in Central-Eastern Cantabria (Spain) in the Early and Middle Holocene
- From Coastal Sites to Elevated Hinterland Locations in the Mesolithic – Discussing Human–Woodland Interaction in the Oslo Fjord Region, Southeast Norway
- Exploitation of Osseous Materials During the Mesolithic in the Iron Gates
- Motorways of Prehistory? Boats, Rivers and Moving in Mesolithic Ireland
- Environment and Plant Use at La Tourasse (South-West France) at the Late Glacial–Holocene Transition
- Stylistic Study of the Late Mesolithic Industries in Western France: Combined Principal Coordinate Analysis and Use-Wear Analysis
- Mesolithic Occupations During the Boreal Climatic Fluctuations at La Baume de Monthiver (Var, France)
- Pressure Flakers of Late Neolithic Forest Hunter-Gatherer-Fishers of Eastern Europe and Their Remote Counterparts
- The Site Groß Fredenwalde, NE-Germany, and the Early Cemeteries of Northern Europe
- Special Issue on Archaeology of Migration: Moving Beyond Historical Paradigms, edited by Catharine Judson & Hagit Nol
- The Blurry Third Millennium. “Neolithisation” in a Norwegian Context
- Movement or Diaspora? Understanding a Multigenerational Puebloan and Ndee Community on the Central Great Plains
- Human Mobility and the Spread of Innovations – Case Studies from Neolithic Central and Southeast Europe
- The Thule Migration: A Culture in a Hurry?
- The Transformation of Domes in Medieval Chinese Mosques: From Immigrant Muslims to Local Followers
- Landscapes of Movement Along the (Pre)Historical Libyan Sea: Keys for a Socio-Ecological History
- Arab Migration During Early Islam: The Seventh to Eighth Century AD from an Archaeological Perspective
- Special Issue on Ancient Cultural Routes: Past Transportations Infrastructures as a Two-Way Interaction Between Society and Environment, edited by Francesca Fulminante, Francesca Mazzilli & Franziska Engelbogen
- The Impact of Transportation on Pottery Industries in Roman Britain
- The Role of the Road in Settling a Mountainous Region
- An Example of Geographic Network Analysis: The Case Study of the Fortore Valley (Molise and Apulia, Italy)
- Water, Communication, Sight, and the Location of Fortifications on the Strata Diocletiana (Syria) in Late Antiquity
- Transport, Interaction, and Connectivity
- Special Issue on Scales of Interaction in the Bronze and Iron Age Central Mediterranean, edited by Emily Holt & Davide Schirru
- Tracing Mobility Patterns of Buried Species of the Late Iron Age Funerary Staggered Turriform of Son Ferrer (Calvià, Spain)
- Approaching Interaction in Iron Age Sardinia: Multi-Scalar Survey Evidence from the Sinis Archaeological Project and the Progetto S’Urachi
- From the Atlantic to the Mediterranean and Back: Sardinia, Iberia, and the Transfer of Knowledge in Late Bronze Age Networks
- Special Issue on Bricks Under the Scope: Microscopic and Macroscopic Approaches to the Study of Earthen Architecture, edited by Marta Lorenzon, Moritz Kinzel, & Benjamín Cutillas-Victoria
- Earthen Architecture in Nordic Countries: Future Directions
- Earthen Architecture and Craft Practices of Early Iron Age Ramparts: Geoarchaeological Analysis of Villares de la Encarnación, South-Eastern Iberia
- Earthen Architecture in Southern Algeria: An Assessment of Social Values and the Impact of Industrial Building Practices
- Studying the Use of Earth in Early Architecture of Southwest and Central Asia
- Roof Tiles and Bricks of the Etruscan Domus dei Dolia (Vetulonia, Italy): An Archaeological and Archaeometric Study of Construction Materials
- The Building Blocks of Circular Economies: Rethinking Prehistoric Turf Architecture Through Archaeological and Architectural Analysis
- Undecorated Roman-Period Roof Tiles – An Old Material Providing New Results
- Turf Building in Iceland – Past, Present, and Future
- Special Issue on Past Sounds: New Perspectives in the Field of Archaeoacoustics, edited by Margarita Díaz-Andreu & Neemias Santos da Rosa
- Employing Psychoacoustics in Sensory Archaeology: Developments at the Ancient Sanctuary of Zeus on Mount Lykaion
- One, Two, Three! Can Everybody Hear Me? Acoustics of Roman Contiones. Case Studies of the Capitoline Hill and the Temple of Bellona in Rome
- Ringing Tone and Drumming Sages in the Crevice Cave of Pirunkirkko, Koli, Finland
- Music and Storytelling at Rock Art Sites? The Archaeoacoustics of the Urkosh Area (Russian Altai)
- Listening in Sacred Spaces: The Sanctuary of Poseidonia and Selinunte’s Main Urban Sanctuary
- Presenting Archaeoacoustics Results Using Multimedia and VR Technologies
- Special Issue on Reconsidering the Chaîne Opératoire: Towards a Multifaceted Approach to the Archaeology of Techniques, edited by Marie-Elise Porqueddu, Claudia Sciuto & Anaïs Lamesa
- Reconsidering the Chaîne Opératoire: At the Crossroad Between People and Materials
- Materiality of Plaster Vessels: The Problem of Southwest Asian Neolithic White Ware
- The Chaîne Opératoire Approach for Interpreting Personal Ornament Production: Marble Beads in Copper Age Tuscany (Italy)
- Seriality and Individualization: Carving the Fluted Sarcophagi from Hierapolis of Phrygia
- Making Vessels for the Dead: Pottery-Making Practices, Chaîne Opératoire and the Use of Grog (Crushed Sherds) as a Technological and Cultural Choice during Late and Inca Periods in the Northwestern Argentine Region (Southern Andes)
- An Invention Shading Light to the Socio-History of Bonneuil Quarry Basin: The Roadheaders with Rotating Drill Bits
- The Ugly Duckling: Understanding the Making of an Early Copper Age Atypical Ceramic Vessel from the Great Hungarian Plain
- Synopsis of a Treasure. A Transdisciplinary Study of Medieval Gold Workings Biographies
- Identification of Ceramic Traditions on the Prehistoric Mines of Gavà (Barcelona, Spain)