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To browse Academia. Landscape archaeology in Central Europe has historically built on a foundation of high-resolution excavations of village structures. In this poster, we combine results of systematic plow zone survey carried out by two research groups to explore and reflect on the contributions of regional survey for understanding Neolithic land use in southern Germany. Surveys were conducted in two areas with contrasting archaeological records and geographic characteristics.
To the south, in the Alpine Foreland, exceptional preservation and detailed excavations of Upper and Final Neolithic sites in lakes and bogs raise questions about the presence, intensity, and type of Neolithic activities that might have occurred outside the intensively-studied wetlands. We analyze the distribution of Neolithic materials in lithic scatters and compare their location and density between regions and across time periods to consider questions of settlement continuity, nonresidential activities, and effects of factors such as site visibility and modern land use on known site distributions.
Up to now, only little is known about the settlement structure and the environmental conditions and changes in northwestern Germany during the 4th and 3rd millennium BC, although various megalithic monuments, grave mounds as well as surface finds indicate that the area was settled by the West Group of the Funnel Beaker and the subsequent Single Grave Cultures.
Therefore, five local research areas were selected that bear high potential for interdisciplinary investigations into the structural context between graves and settlements, the temporal and spatial patterns of the Neolithic occupation period, and on the human impact on the landscape. At least one pollen profile from each local research area was recovered from bogs and fens to work on the landscape reconstruction of Northwestern Germany.