Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

 

13th millennium BC

Millennia:
Centuries:
  • 130th century BC
  • 129th century BC
  • 128th century BC
  • 127th century BC
  • 126th century BC
  • 125th century BC
  • 124th century BC
  • 123rd century BC
  • 122nd century BC
  • 121st century BC

The 13th millennium BC spanned the years 13,000 BC to 12,001 BC (c. 15 ka to c. 14 ka). This millennium is during the Upper Paleolithic period. It is impossible to precisely date events that happened during this millennium, and all dates associated with this millennium are estimates mostly based on geological analysis, anthropological analysis, and radiometric dating.

Geology

Animals

In France, the first incisor from a red deer is dated to the 13-12th millennium BC.[1] In Levantine Natufian sites, dogs occur as early as this millennium.[2]

Environmental changes

More than a century ago, it first became clear how much of the Magdalenian and Azilian underwent change in Western Europe.[3] Since that time, these mutations succeeding one another between the 14th and 12th millennium BC, particularly during the Lateglacial warming, were often seen as a real revolution, frequently described through the filter of myths of catastrophes which then inspired and at times still influences prehistoric research.[3]

Human culture

Humans

It is known that obsidian mining in Asia Minor was well underway by this millennium.[4] Obsidian was a resource that hunter-gatherers may have traded during this millennium.[4]

Technology and agriculture

The frequency of occurrence of fundamental tool groups such as end-scrapers, burins, truncated pieces, backed pieces, perforators, and combination tools in Moravian inventory is most closely matched and is dated to the late 13th - early 11th millennium BC.[5] From the 17th to the 9th millennium BC, no surface pressure flaking technology is known to have existed in Europe.[6] Computer simulations demonstrate that "proto" agriculture might have started far earlier than the Fertile Crescent's conventional "beginning" of agriculture, which is supposed to have occurred around the time of the 13th millennium BC's last glacial maximum (LGM) or the beginning of the 9th millennium BC.[7] This "proto-agriculture" phases may have begun (perhaps separately) across Eurasia and Africa at various locations.[7]

Other cultural developments

Jebel Sahaba, a prehistoric battle site, dates to the 17-12th millennium BC.[8] Round corrals have been discovered in archaeological settings dating back to this millennium.[9] Boncuklu and Pınarbaşı sites stretch back to this millennium.[10]

Notes

Bibliography

Books

  • Desrosiers, Pierre M. (13 March 2012). The Emergence of Pressure Blade Making: from Origin to Modern Experimentation. Springer New York. p. 269. ISBN 9781461420033. Retrieved 25 May 2023.

Journals

Conference reports

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya


Index: pl ar de en es fr it arz nl ja pt ceb sv uk vi war zh ru af ast az bg zh-min-nan bn be ca cs cy da et el eo eu fa gl ko hi hr id he ka la lv lt hu mk ms min no nn ce uz kk ro simple sk sl sr sh fi ta tt th tg azb tr ur zh-yue hy my ace als am an hyw ban bjn map-bms ba be-tarask bcl bpy bar bs br cv nv eml hif fo fy ga gd gu hak ha hsb io ig ilo ia ie os is jv kn ht ku ckb ky mrj lb lij li lmo mai mg ml zh-classical mr xmf mzn cdo mn nap new ne frr oc mhr or as pa pnb ps pms nds crh qu sa sah sco sq scn si sd szl su sw tl shn te bug vec vo wa wuu yi yo diq bat-smg zu lad kbd ang smn ab roa-rup frp arc gn av ay bh bi bo bxr cbk-zam co za dag ary se pdc dv dsb myv ext fur gv gag inh ki glk gan guw xal haw rw kbp pam csb kw km kv koi kg gom ks gcr lo lbe ltg lez nia ln jbo lg mt mi tw mwl mdf mnw nqo fj nah na nds-nl nrm nov om pi pag pap pfl pcd krc kaa ksh rm rue sm sat sc trv stq nso sn cu so srn kab roa-tara tet tpi to chr tum tk tyv udm ug vep fiu-vro vls wo xh zea ty ak bm ch ny ee ff got iu ik kl mad cr pih ami pwn pnt dz rmy rn sg st tn ss ti din chy ts kcg ve 
Prefix: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9