Litcius/Paper detail

River networks and funerary metal in the Bronze Age of the Carpathian Basin

Paul R. Duffy

2020PLoS ONE18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Archaeologists use differences in metals from burial contexts to identify variation in social inequalities during the European Bronze Age. Many have argued that these social inequalities depended on access to, and control of, trade routes. In this paper, I model critical gateways in the Tisza river-a river system in the Carpathian Basin that might have enabled privileged access to metal in some areas but not others. I then evaluate the concentration of metal on different topological nodes of the river network in an attempt to understand what best explains the distribution of metals across this landscape. I do this by describing Bronze Age metal consumption and display in cemeteries from four micro-regions of the Tisza, and compare them with network 'betweenness centrality' values for locations along the river. I find support for the argument that favourably located river nodes had better access to metal in the earlier part of the Bronze Age.

Topics & Concepts

Bronze AgeBetweenness centralityArchaeologyDrainage basinGeographyConsumption (sociology)BronzeStructural basinChinaCentralityGeologyPaleontologySociologyCartographySocial scienceCombinatoricsMathematicsArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologyArchaeology and Rock Art Studies