The Site of the Maykop Culture in the Mountains of the Northwestern Caucasus
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The Meshoko rock shelter was first explored in the 1960s. Along with some other settlements
in the vicinity, its materials were interpreted as evidence of the synchronism of the
early Maykop and late Eneolithic cultures. Modern excavations have shown that Maykop and
Eneolithic finds are concentrated in different layers, with natural deposits between them. The
stratigraphic sequence of the Meshoko rock shelter consisted of six main layers. Maykop artifacts
were in the third layer from above. The most interesting object discovered there is the
hearth, the base and walls of which were formed by limestones. No evidence of a dwelling was
found, which probably indicates the temporary nature of the settlement. The few Eneolithic
materials cannot be confidently synchronized with the Maykop culture. It is more likely that
they were introduced into the third layer through pits which were dug down from the Maykop
level. The bulk of the collection of the third layer is associated with the Maykop culture, most
likely with the middle stage of its development (Inozemtsevo-Kostromskaia). This conclusion
corresponds to the radiocarbon dates of the settlement, which were about 3600–3000 BC.
The Meshoko rock shelter is located at the bottom of the mountain gorge. This is unusual for
Maykop sites, which, as a rule, occupy the steppe and flat areas of the foothills. Also, there
are no close analogies in the paleoethnobotany and archaeozoology assemblages. The study
of these ecofacts indicate that the Maykop population probably lived in a forest zone and was
well adapted to the conditions of the local environment.
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Citation
Ostashinskii S. M., Cherlenok E. A. The Site of the Maykop Culture in the Mountains of the Northwestern Caucasus. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2021, vol. 66, issue 2, рp. 585–601.