Ground and abrasive stone tools from Belovode and Pločnik:
The Neolithic polished stone industry in Serbia appears as a fully developed operation, with clearly defined and formed types of tools; there is currently little evidence relating to its origins. An exception is the area of the Djerdap Gorge in northeastern Serbia, where the specificity of the populated area and immersion in different types of raw ...
Dimić, Vidan, Antonović, Dragana
openaire +2 more sources
Belovode: past, present and future [PDF]
The 2012 and 2013 excavations and subsequent post- excavation analyses by The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia project team at the site of Belovode built upon two decades of earlier work led by the National Museum of Belgrade and the Museum in Požarevac ...
Radivojevic, M, Roberts, BW
core
Where do we take global early metallurgy studies next? [PDF]
The results and experiences gained from the multidisciplinary and holistic approaches underlying the Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia project provide an opportunity, not only to reflect on programmes of further research in the Balkans, but also on ...
Radivojevic, M, Rehren, T, Roberts, BW
core
Proučavanje procesa domestikacije u Srbiji - domestikacija goveda u neolitu [PDF]
The neolithic settlement Belovode, situated between the two important centres of prehistoric culture: Vinča and Rudna Glava has been only partly investigated.
Janković, Ž. +4 more
core +1 more source
The economic and social importance of saline soils and saltwaters during the late neolithic of the Pannonian plain and the central Balkans [PDF]
The importance of salt in human and animal diets suggests that the local resources of saline soils, watercourses, and marshes with saline water had to be well known to past populations.
Milanović, Dragan
core +2 more sources
The Rise of Metallurgy in Eurasia: Evolution, organisation and consumption of early metal in the Balkans: an introduction to the project [PDF]
The study of early metallurgy has many aspects and has, accordingly, taken many forms and foci (Rehren and Pernicka 2008 and literature therein). Some scholars have documented the morpho-typological evolution of artefact types and some have explored the ...
Radivojevic, M, Rehren, T, Roberts, BW
core
Food economy during and after the neolithiceneolithic transition in the central Balkans: Contextualising crops and domestic animals from Eneolithic Bubanj, southern Serbia [PDF]
Druga polovina 5. i veći deo 4. milenijuma pre nove ere na centralnom Balkanu označava se kao period prelaza iz kasnog neolita (tj. vinčanske kulture) u rani eneolit, i eneolitski period.
Bulatović, Aleksandar +2 more
core +2 more sources
Malachite finds in Vinča culture: Evidence of early copper metallurgy in Serbia [PDF]
Large ore deposits in the central Balkans resulted in early discovery of metallurgy by the Neolithic inhabitants. High quantity of malachite at some Vinča culture sites was explained as associated with the beginning of metallurgy.
Antonović, Dragana
core
Pyrotechnological connections? Re-investigating the link between pottery firing technology and the origins of metallurgy in the Vinča Culture, Serbia [PDF]
The present paper re-examines the purported relationship between Late Neolithic/Early Chalcolithic pottery firing technology and the world's earliest recorded copper metallurgy at two Serbian Vinča culture sites, Belovode and Pločnik (c. 5350 to 4600 BC).
Amicone, S +4 more
core
The origin of Neolithic copper on the central Northern European plain and in Southern Scandinavia: Connectivities on a European scale. [PDF]
Brozio JP +7 more
europepmc +1 more source

