MASF 4

Mikael A. Manninen:
Culture, Behaviour, and the 8200 cal BP Cold Event


Culture, Behaviour, and the 8200 cal BP Cold Event (pdf: 25,7 MB)
Mikael A. Manninen

The main thesis incorporates the following embedded articles:

Paper I. Manninen, M. A. & Knutsson, K. 2011. Northern Inland Oblique Point Sites – a New Look into the Late Mesolithic Oblique Point Tradition in Eastern Fennoscandia. In: T. Rankama (Ed.), Mesolithic Interfaces – Variability in Lithic Technologies in Eastern Fennoscandia. Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland 1, 143–175.

Paper II. Manninen, M. A. 2009. Evidence of mobility between the coast and the inland region in the Mesolithic of Northern Fennoscandia. In: S. B. McCartan, R. Schulting, G. Warren, P. Woodman (Eds.), Mesolithic Horizons, Vol. I. Oxbow books, Oxford, pp. 102–108. Embedded with permission from Oxbow books.

Paper III. Tallavaara, M., Manninen, M. A., Hertell, E. & Rankama, T. 2010. How flakes shatter: a critical evaluation of quartz fracture analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 37, 2442–2448. Embedded with permission from Elsevier.

Paper IV. Manninen, M. A. & Tallavaara, M. 2011. Descent History of Mesolithic Oblique Points in Eastern Fennoscandia – a Technological Comparison Between Two Artefact Populations. In: T. Rankama (Ed.), Mesolithic Interfaces – Variability in Lithic Technologies in Eastern Fennoscandia. Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland 1, 177–211.

Paper V. Manninen, M. A. & Knutsson, K. 2014. Lithic raw material diversification as an adaptive strategy–Technology, mobility, and site structure in Late Mesolithic northernmost Europe. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 33, 84–98. Embedded with permission from Elsevier.


Get Acrobat Reader



Back to Top