What have genetics ever done for us? The implications of aDNA data for interpreting identity in Early Neolithic Central Europe

D Hofmann�- European journal of archaeology, 2015 - cambridge.org
D Hofmann
European journal of archaeology, 2015cambridge.org
This paper is concerned with the impact of ancient DNA data on our models of the Mesolithic–
Neolithic transition in central Europe. Beginning with a brief overview of how genetic data
have been received by archaeologists working in this area, it outlines the potential and
remaining problems of this kind of evidence. As a migration around the beginning of the
Neolithic now seems certain, new research foci are then suggested. One is renewed
attention to the motivations and modalities of the migration process. The second is a�…
This paper is concerned with the impact of ancient DNA data on our models of the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition in central Europe. Beginning with a brief overview of how genetic data have been received by archaeologists working in this area, it outlines the potential and remaining problems of this kind of evidence. As a migration around the beginning of the Neolithic now seems certain, new research foci are then suggested. One is renewed attention to the motivations and modalities of the migration process. The second is a fundamental change in attitude towards the capabilities of immigrant Neolithic populations to behave in novel and creative ways, abilities which in our transition models were long exclusively associated with hunter-gatherers.
Cambridge University Press