Seating Spaces in Scandinavian Mesolithic Dwellings
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The analysis of positioning patterns for individuals in Mesolithic dwellings presented here is
based, on the one hand, on ethnographic data on hunter-gatherer culture-specific patterns
for the placing of individuals in the dwelling space and, on the other, on observations in the
excavated archaeological record of repetition in the spatial organisation of small artefact concentrations,
hearths etc. in the well-preserved remains of Mesolithic dwellings. In addition to
the latter spatial organisational patterns, zones containing relatively low densities of debitage
have also, in a couple of cases, been seen to coincide with the proposed positions of individuals,
as indicated by the ‘positive’ activity indicators. It has been suggested that these so-called
‘seating spaces’ are indicative of the fact that individuals seated in a dwelling kept their seating
positions free of smaller pieces of waste. They possibly achieved this by sitting on some form
of underlay — a small mat of skin or bark — that could easily be cleaned off while they drew
to their seating positions larger pieces of debitage that were useful as tools for cutting, shaping
etc. Based on data from several well-documented Mesolithic sites, this paper investigates this
latter aspect further as a potentially independent way of checking the results of the first phase
of distribution analysis of the Mesolithic dwellings. In general, recent excavations incorporating
systematic recording of the flint debitage appear to produce meaningful results, while
earlier excavations, where this category was recorded in less detail — often just being counted
and discarded — tend not to.
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Grøn O. Seating Spaces in Scandinavian Mesolithic Dwellings. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History, 2021, vol. 66, issue 3, рp. 890–908.