Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T05:06:27.821Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Social Change and Land Use in Prehistoric Dalmatia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2014

John Chapman
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
Robert Shiel
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural & Environmental Science, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU

Abstract

The Neothermal Dalmatia Project is an Anglo-Yugoslav collaborative project whose aims are to define and explain changes in physical environment, settlement pattern and social structure in north Dalmatia over the last 12 millennia. The Project's fieldwork included archaeological field survey, analytical survey, trial excavation of Neolithic, Copper Age, Bronze Age, Iron Age and Roman sites, soil and land use mapping, ethnographic survey of modern villages and hamlets and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions (pollen, sediments, sea-level change, etc.). Within the long-term constraints of a limestone-dominated study region, the short-term events and medium-term agrarian and demographic cycles of the Dalmatian social groups have been studied in an inter-disciplinary manner. In this article, an attempt is made to examine the environmental and archaeological data within the frameworks of four explanatory models: the Land Use Capability (LUC) Model, the Cyclic Intensification–Deintensification (CID) Model, the Communal Ownership of Property (COP) Model and the Arenas of Social Power (ASP) Model. In the LUC model, reconstructions of past land use capabilities are used to derive postdictions of the most likely settlement patterns for successive periods (Neolithic–Roman); a high degree of postdictive success is met. In the CID model, Bintliff's model of cyclic variations in agricultural intensification and private land-holding is refined and tested against survey and excavation data. In the COP model, Fleming's model of communal land ownership is tested against similar data, with contrasting results. Finally, the ASP model is used to explain the expanded range of arenas of social power which develops from a place-based worldview in the early farming period. The conjoint use of these four explanatory models, which operate at different scales of duration, provides a broader basis for understanding changes in the prehistory of north Dalmatia in the Neothermal period than had previously been constructed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Alföldy, G. 1965. Bevölkerung und Gesellschaft in der römischen Provinz Dalmatien. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiado.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1966. Stariji Neolit u Dalmaciju. Zadar: Arheološko Društvo Jugoslavije.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1968. Istraživanje ilirskog naselja u Radovinu. Diadora 4, 5384.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1968a. Nin u prapovijesno doba. Zadar: Radovi Instituta Jugoslavenska Akademija u Zadru.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1974. Ostava iz Jagodnje Gornje u okviru zadnje faze Liburnske kulture. Diadora 7, 159245.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1977. Caracteristiques des agglomérations fortifiées dans la région des Liburniens. Godišnjak (Certtar za Balkanološka Ispitivanja) 15, 201–25.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1979. Jadranska zona. In Benac, A. (ed.), Praistorija jugoslavenskih zemalja II:Neolit, 473634. Sarajevo: Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1983. Kasno brončano doba na istočnom Jadranskom primorju. In Benac, A. (ed.), Praistorija jugoslavenskih zemalja IV:Bronzano Doba, 271373. Sarajevo: Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. 1987. Liburnska grupa. In Benac, A. (ed.), Praistorija jugoslavenskih zemalja V:Željezno Doba, 339–90. Sarajevo: Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. & Chapman, J. 1985. The ‘Neothermal Dalmatia’ Project. In Macready, S. & Thompson, F. H. (eds), Archaeological Field Survey in Britain and Abroad, 158–95. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. & Chapman, J. 1986. Buković-Lastvine. Eneolitsko naselje. Arheološki Pregled 24, 5253.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. & Chapman, J. 1987. Istraživanje Gradine u Nadinu. Obavijesti 19, 2831.Google Scholar
Batović, Š. & Kukos, S. 1986. Podvršje/Matkov brig. Arheološki Pregled 1986, 6163.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. 1982. Settlement patterns, land tenure and social structure: a diachronic model. In Renfrew, C. & Shennan, S. (eds), Ranking, Resources and Exchange, 106–11. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. 1982a. Palaeoclimatic modelling of environmental changes in the East Mediterranean region since the last glaciation. In Bintliff, J. L. & van Zeist, W. (eds), 485527.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. 1982b. Climatic change, archaeology and Quaternary science in the eastern Mediterranean region. In Harding, A. F. (ed.), Climatic Change and Later Prehistory, 143–61. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. (ed.) 1984. European Social Evolution. Archaeological Perspectives. Bradford: University of Bradford.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. (ed.) 1991. The Annales School and Archaeology. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. & Snodgrass, A. 1988. Off-site pottery distributions: a regional and inter-regional perspective. Current Anthropology 29, 506–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bintliff, J. L. & van Zeist, W. (eds) 1982. Palaeoclimates, Palaeoenvironments and Human Communities in the Eastern Mediterranean Region in Later Prehistory. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Bottema, S. 1974. Late Quaternary Vegetation History of North Western Greece. Gröningen: VRB Offsetdrukkerij.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1977. Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourke, A. 1984. Impact of climatic fluctuations on European agriculture. In Flohn, H. & Fantechi, R. (eds), The Climate of Europe: Past, Present and Future, 269314. Dordrecht: D. Reidel.Google Scholar
Bradford, J. 1957. Ancient Landscapes. London: G. Bell & Son.Google Scholar
Čače, S. 1982. Liburnske zajednice i njihovi teritoriji. Dometi 15, 4152.Google Scholar
Čače, S. 1985. Liburnija u razdoblju od 4. do 1. stoljeća prije nove ere. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis. Zadar: Sveučiliste u Splitu - Filozofski Fakultet u Zadru.Google Scholar
Carrier, E. H. 1932. Water and Grass; a Study in the Pastoral Economy of Southern Europe. London: Christophers.Google Scholar
Chagnon, N. A. 1990. Reproductive and somatic conflicts of interests in the genesis of violence and warfare amongst tribesmen. In Haas, J. (ed.), The Anthropology of Warfare, 77104. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chang, J. 1968. Climate and Agriculture. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. C. 1981. The value of Dalmatian museum collections to Dalmatian settlement studies. In Cantwell, A-M., Griffin, J. B. & Rothschild, N. A. (eds), The Research Potential of Anthropological Museum Collections, 529–55. New York: Annals of New York Academy of Science 376.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. C. 1988. From ‘space’ to ‘place’: a model of dispersed settlement and Neolithic society. In Burgess, C., Topping, P. & Mordant, D. (eds), Enclosures and Defences in the Neolithic of Western Europe, 2146. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. C. 1989. The early Balkan village. Varia Archaeologica Hungarica 2, 3353.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. 1990. Social inequality on Bulgarian tells and the Varna problem. In Samson, R. (ed.), The Social Archaeology of Houses, 4992. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. 1991. The creation of social arenas in the Neolithic and Copper Age of south east Europe: the case of Varna. In Garwood, P. et al. (eds), Sacred and Profane, 152171. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. & Batović, Š. 1985. The Neothermal Dalmatia Project — third (1984) season. Archaeological Reports (Durham & Newcastle) for 1984, 811.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. C., Bintliff, J., Gaffney, V. & Slapšak, B. (eds), 1988. Recent Developments in Yugoslav Archaeology. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. C. & Müller, J. 1990. Early farmers in the Mediterranean basin: the Dalmatian evidence. Antiquity 64, 127–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. C. & Shiel, R. 1988. The Neothermal Dalmatia Project — archaeological survey results. In Chapman, et al. (eds), 130.Google Scholar
Chapman, J. C. & Shiel, R. S. 1991. Settlement, soils and societies in Dalmatia. In Barker, G. & Lloyd, J. (eds), Roman Landscapes. Archaeological Survey in the Mediterranean Region, 6275. London: British School in Rome.Google Scholar
Chapman, J., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. 1987. Settlement patterns and land use in Neothermal Dalmatia, Yugoslavia: 1983–1984 seasons. Journal of Field Archaeology 14, 123–46.Google Scholar
Clarke, D. L. 1979. The economic context of trade and industry in barbarian Europe till Roman times. In Analytical Archaeologist: Collected Papers of David L. Clarke, 263331. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Clutton-Brock, J. 1987. A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals. London: British Museum (Natural History).Google Scholar
Cohen, M. N. 1977. The Food Crisis in Prehistory. Over-population and the Origins of Agriculture. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Collis, J. 1984. The European Iron Age. London: Batsford.Google Scholar
Coones, P. 1985. One landscape or many? A geographical perspective. Landscape History 7, 512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cosgrove, D. E. 1984. Social Formation and Symbolic Landscape. London: Croom Helm.Google Scholar
Čović, B. 1980. Počeci metalurgije željeza na sjevernoza-padnom Balkanu. Godišnjak XVIII (Centar za Balkanološka Ispitivanja 16, 6379.Google Scholar
Criado, F. 1989. ‘We, the post-megalithic people’. In Hodder, I. (ed.), The Meaning of Things, 7989. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Dédijer, J. 1916. La transhumance dans les pays balkaniques. Annales de Géographie 25, 347–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dietler, M. 1989. Greeks, Etruscans and thirsty barbarians: interaction in the Rhone Basin of France. In Champion, T. (ed.), Centre and Periphery. Comparative Studies in Archaeology, 127–41. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Dimbleby, G. W. 1985. The Palynology of Archaeological Sites. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Erasmus, C. J. 1965. Monument building: some field experiments. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 21/4, 277301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faber, A. 1976. Prilog kronologiji fortifikacija uprimorskom Iliriku. In Jadranska Obala u Protohistoriju, 227246. Zagreb: Centar za Povijesne Znanosti Sveučilista u Zagrebu.Google Scholar
Fairbridge, R.W. 1961. Eustatic changes in sea level. Physics and Chemistry of the Earth 4, 99185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Filipović, G. & Čirić, M. 1969. Soils of Yugoslavia. Beograd: Jugoslovensko Društvo za Proučavanje Zemljišta.Google Scholar
Filipović, M. S. (ed.), 1963. Simpozium o srednjevjekovskom katunu. Sarajevo: Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine.Google Scholar
Fleming, A. 1982. Social boundaries and land boundaries. In Renfrew, C. & Shennan, S. (eds), Ranking, Resources and Exchange, 5255. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fleming, A. 1984. The prehistoric landscape of Dartmoor: wider implications. Landscape History 6, 519.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, A. 1985. Land tenure, productivity and field systems. In Barker, G. & Gamble, C. (eds), Beyond Domestication in Prehistoric Europe, 129–46. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Fleming, A. 1987. Coaxial field systems: some questions of time and space. Antiquity 61, 188202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleming, A. 1988. The Dartmoor Reaves. Investigating Prehistoric Land Divisions. London: Batsford.Google Scholar
Forenbaher, S. & Vranjićan, P. 1985. Vaganačka pećina. Opuscula Archaeologica 10, 121.Google Scholar
Frenzel, B. 1967. Climatic change in the Atlantic/Boreal transition on the Northern Hemisphere botanical evidence in Sawyer, J. S. (ed.), 99125.Google Scholar
Gaffney, C., Gaffney, V. & Tingle, M. 1985. Settlement, economy or behaviour? Micro-regional land use models and the interpretation of surface artefact patterns. In Haselgrove, C., Millett, M. and Smith, I. (eds), Archaeology from the Ploughsoil, 95108. Sheffield: Dept. of Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Gallant, T. W. 1982. The Levkas-Pronnoi Survey. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Garner, H. V. & Dyke, C. V. 1969. The Broadbalk yields. Annual Report of Rothamsted Experimental Station for 1968 Part 2, 1649.Google Scholar
Gilman, A. 1981. The development of social stratification in Bronze Age Europe. Current Anthropology 22, 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greene, K. 1990. Perspectives on Roman technology. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 9/2, 209–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grüger, E. in press. The pollen diagram from Bokanjačko Blato, Dalmatia. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Harding, A. 1972. Illyrians, Italians and Myceneans: trans-Adriatic contacts during the Late Bronze Age. Studia Albanica 9/2, 215–21.Google Scholar
Harding, A. F. (ed.) 1982. Introduction. In Harding, A. F. (ed.), Climatic Change in Later Prehistory, 110. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Harvey, D. 1973. Social Justice and the City. London: E. Arnold.Google Scholar
Haselgrove, C. 1987. Culture process on the periphery: Belgic Gaul and Rome during the late Republic and the early Empire. In Rowlands, M., Larsen, M. & Kristiansen, K. (eds), Centre and Periphery in the Ancient World, 104–24. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Higgs, E.S. & Jarman, M. R. 1969. The origins of agriculture: a reconsideration. Antiquity 43, 3143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I. 1990. The Domestication of Europe. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Hogbin, H. I. 1939. Native land tenure in New Guinea. Oceania 10, 120–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, J. 1983. Settlement and Economy in Neolithic Northern France. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntley, B. 1988. Europe. In Huntley, B. & Webb, T. III (eds), Vegetation History, 341–84. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntley, J. in press a. The botanical remains from Tinj-Podlivade. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Huntley, J. in press b. The botanical remains from Buković-Lastvine. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Ilakovac, B. 1965. Pećina Buta. Diadora 1, 2736.Google Scholar
Ilakovac, B. 1982. Rimski akvedukti na području sjeverne Dalmacije. Zagreb: Arheološki Muzej Zadar.Google Scholar
Jarman, M. R., Bailey, G. & Jarman, H. N. 1981. Early European Agriculture. London: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Jelgersma, S. 1966. Sea level changes during the last 10,000 years. In Sawyer, J. S. (ed.), 5471.Google Scholar
Keay, S. 1991. The Ager Tarraconensis in the late Empire: a model for the economic relationship of town and country in eastern Spain. In Barker, G. & Lloyd, J. (eds), Roman Landscapes. Archaeological Survey in the Mediterranean Region, 7987. London: British School in Rome.Google Scholar
Klingebiel, A. A. & Montgomery, P. H. 1961. Land Capability Classification. U.S. Department of Agriculture Soil Conservation Service Agricultural Handbook no. 210. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture.Google Scholar
Kristiansen, K. 1984. Ideology and material culture: an archaeological perspective. In Spriggs, M. (ed.), Marxist Perspectives in Archaeology, 72100. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lamb, H. H. 1977. Climate: Present, Vast and Future. Volume 2. Climatic History and the Future. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Lamb, H. H. 1982. Climate, History and the Modern World. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Lewthwaite, J. G. 1986. Nuraghic foundations: an alternative model of development in Sardinian prehistory c. 2500–1500 B.C. In Balmuth, M. S. (ed.), Studies in Sardinian Archaeology, volume II: Sardinia in the Mediterranean, 1937. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Liebig, J. 1841. Chemistry in its Application to Agriculture and Physiology. London.Google Scholar
Lockwood, J. G. 1974. World Climatology. London: Longmans.Google Scholar
MAFF. 1964. The Farmer's Weather. Ministry of Agriculture Bulletin 165: London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Mann, M. 1986. The Sources of Social Power. Volume 1. A History of Power from the Beginning to A.D. 1760. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Maran, J. 1987. Kulturbeziehungen zwischen Nordwestlichem Balkan und Südgriechenland am Übergang vom Spät Äneolithikum zur Frühen Bronzezeit (Reinecke A1). Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt 17, 7785.Google Scholar
Marić, L. 1964. Terra rossa u karstu Jugoslavije. Zagreb: Jugoslovenska Akademija Znanosti i Umjetnosti.Google Scholar
Millett, M. 1986. Field survey calibration: a contribution. In Haselgrove, C., Millett, M. & Smith, I. (eds), Archaeology from the Ploughsoil, 3137. Sheffield: Dept. of Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Millett, M. 1991. Pottery: population or supply patterns? The Ager Tarraconensis approach. In Barker, G. & Lloyd, J. (eds), Roman Landscapes. Archaeological Survey in the Mediterranean Region, 1826. London: British School in Rome.Google Scholar
Money, D. C. 1978. Climate, Soils and Vegetation. Slough: University Tutorial Press.Google Scholar
Nandris, J. 1988. Ethnoarchaeology and Latinity in the mountains of the southern Velebit. In Chapman, J. et al. (eds), 125–43.Google Scholar
Nash, D. 1987. Imperial expansion under the Roman Republic. In Rowlands, M., Larsen, M. & Kristiansen, K. (eds), Centre and Periphery in the Ancient World, 87103. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nye, S. in press a. The botanical remains from Nadin-Gradina: the Iron Age. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & S. Batović, (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Nye, S. in press b. The botanical remains from Nadin-Gradina: the Roman period. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Parry, M. L. 1978. Climatic Change, Agriculture and Settlement. Folkestone: Dawson. Historical Geography.Google Scholar
Peroni, R. 1979. From Bronze Age to Iron Age: economic, historical and social considerations. In Ridgway, D. & Ridgway, F. R. (eds), Italy before the Romans, 730. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Peterson, G. W., Webb, T., Kutzbach, J. E., van der Hammen, T., Wijmstra, T. & Street, F. A. 1979. The continental record of environmental conditions at 18,000 yr BP: an initial evaluation. Quaternary Research 12, 4782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pope, K. O. & van Andel, Tj. 1984. Late Quaternary alluviation and soil formation in the southern Argolid: its history, causes and archaeological implications, Journal of Archaeological Science 11, 281306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raikes, R.L. 1978. Climate in the Mediterranean and Middle East semi arid zones from the Mesolithic to the Chalcolithic (VIII to III millennia BC). In Blake, H. McK., Porter, T.W. & Whitehouse, D. B. (eds), Papers in Italian Archaeology 1, 124. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Reed, C.A. (ed.) 1977. The Origins of Agriculture. The Hague: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renfrew, C. 1972. The Emergence of Civilisation. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Roberts, N. 1989. The Holocene: An Environmental History. London: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Runnels, C. N. & Hansen, J. 1986. The olive in the prehistoric Aegean: the evidence for domestication. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 5/3, 299308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sawyer, J. S. (ed.) 1967. World Climate 8000–0 BC. Proceedings of the international symposium on world climate. London: Royal Meteorological Society.Google Scholar
Schiffer, M. B. 1976. Behavioral Archeology. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Schiffer, M. B. 1987. Formation Processes of the Archaeological Record. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Schwartz, C. A. in press a. The vertebrate fauna from Tinj-Podlivade. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Schwartz, C. A. in press b. The vertebrate fauna from Buković-Lastvine. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Schwartz, C. A. in press c. The vertebrate fauna from Nadin-Gradina: the Iron Age. In Chapman, J. C., Shiel, R. S. & Batović, Š. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia. Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Schwartz, C. A. in press d. The vertebrate fauna from Nadin-Gradina: the Roman period. In Chapman, J., Shiel, R. S. & Batovič, S. (eds), The Changing Face of Dalmatia: Archaeological and Ecological Investigations in a Mediterranean Landscape. London: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Shennan, S. J. 1985. Experiments in the Collection and Analysis of Archaeological Survey Data: the East Hampshire Survey. Sheffield: Dept. of Archaeology & Prehistory, University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. 1979. Plough and pastoralism: aspects of the secondary products revolution. In Hodder, I., Hammond, N. & Isaac, G. (eds), Patterns in the Past, 261305. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shiel, R. & Chapman, J. C. 1988. The extent of change in the agricultural landscape of Dalmatia, Yugoslavia, as a result of 7,000 years of land management. In Chapman, et al. (eds), 3144.Google Scholar
Stančić, Z. & Slapšak, B. 1988. A modular analysis of the field system at Pharos. In Chapman, et al. (eds), 191–99.Google Scholar
Suić, M. 1974. Antički grad na istočnom jadranu. Zagreb: Jugoslovenska Akademija Znanosti i Umjetnosti.Google Scholar
Suić, M. 1981. Zadar u starom vijeku. Posebna izdanja. Zadar: Filozofski Fakultet Zadra.Google Scholar
Tapper, R. L. 1988. Animality, humanity, morality, society. In Ingold, T. (ed.), What is an Animal?, 4762. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Taylor, C. C. 1971. The study of settlement patterns in pre-Saxon Britain. In Ucko, P. J., Tringham, R. & Dimbleby, G. W. (eds), Man, Settlement and Urbanism, 109–13. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Thomas, D. H. 1975. Non site sampling in archaeology: up the creek without a site. In Mueller, J. W. (ed.), Sampling in Archaeology, 6181. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Tosi, M. 1981. ‘Comments’ on Gilman 1981. Current Anthropology 22, 1517.Google Scholar
Tringham, R. 1971. Hunters, Fishers and Farmers in Eastern Europe 6000–3000 BC. London: Hutchinson.Google Scholar
van Straaten, L. M. J. U. 1970. Holocene and Late-Pleistocene sedimentation in the Adriatic Sea. Geologische Rundschau 60, 106–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Zeist, W. & Bottema, S. 1982. Vegetational history of the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East during the last 20,000 years. In Bintliff, J. L. & van Zeist, W. (eds), 277323.Google Scholar
Vinski, Z. 1959. O prethistorijskim zlatnim nalazima u Jugoslaviji. Arheološki Radovi i Rasprave 1, 207–36.Google Scholar
Whittle, A. 1985. Neolithic Europe. A Survey. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Whyte, R.O. 1963. The significance of climate change for natural vegetation and agriculture. Arid Zone Research 20, 381–86.Google Scholar
Wilkes, J. J. 1969. Dalmatia. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Wobst, H. M. 1974. Boundary conditions for Paleolithic social systems: a simulation approach. American Antiquity 39, 147–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wobst, H. M. 1976. Locational relationships in Paleolithic society. Journal of Human Evolution 5, 4958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zbornik, Zadarski Otoci, 1974. Zadarski Otoci Zbornik. Zadar: Jugoslovenska Akademija Znanosti i Umjetnosti.Google Scholar
Zaninović, M. 1977. The economy of Roman Dalmatia. In Temporini, H. (ed.), Aufstieg und Niedergang der Römischen Welt. II.6. Principat, 767809. Berlin: de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, M. (ed.) 1986. Hunters in Transition. Mesolithic Societies of Temperate Eurasia and their Transition to Farming. London: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar