Introduction
Northwest Anatolia: A Border or a Bridge between Anatolia and
the Balkans during the Early Neolithic Period?
Necmi Karul
Anatolia and the Balkans: The Role of the Black Sea between
‘East’ and ‘West’ during the Neolithic Period
Eylem Özdoğan
Whither the Aegean Neolithic?
Burcin Erdoğu
Identifying the Earliest Neolithic Settlements in the
Southeastern Balkans: Methodological Considerations based on the
Recent Geoarchaeological Investigations at Dikili Tash (Greek
Eastern Macedonia)
Laurent Lespez, Zoï Tsirtsoni, Pascal Darcque, Dimitra Malamidou,
Haïdo Koukouli-Chryssanthaki and Arthur Glais
Lithic Industries and their Role in Neolithisation Models in
Southeast Europe
Ivan Gatsov, Petranka Nedelcheva, Malgorzata Kaczanowska and Janusz
K. Kozłowski
Thrace, post-6000 BC
Vassil Nikolov
The First Balkan Neolithic in the Lower Danube Plain and the
Making of a Pottery Tradition
Laurens Thissen
The Beginning of the Neolithic Way of Life in the Eastern Lower
Danube Area: A View from the North
Agathe Reingruber
The Transition from the Mesolithic to the Neolithic between
Western Anatolia and the Lower Danube: Evidence from Burial
Customs
Clemens Lichter
Appendix: 14C Database for Southeast Europe and Adjacent Areas
(6600–5000 cal BC)
Laurens Thissen and Agathe Reingruber
Agathe Reingruber, researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin, is specialized on topics related to the Neolithic and Chalcolithic of southeast Europe (Greece, Turkey, Romania). She is currently running a project in northeastern Thessaly focusing on population dynamics.
Zoï Tsirtsoni, researcher at the French National Centre of Scientific Research (CNRS, Laboratory Archéologies et Sciences de l’Antiquité, Nanterre), is specialized on the Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age periods in the Aegean and southern Balkans. She is co-director of the Greek-French research project at the multilayer (tell) settlement of Dikili Tash in northern Greece.
Petranka Nedelcheva, Assistant Professor at the New Bulgarian University (Sofia), is a lithics specialist for the Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age periods in southeast Europe, western Anatolia and the Caucasus. She participates in several projects in Greece, Turkey, Romania and Georgia.
"...it is very useful to have this volume on bookshelves to continue the dialogue that was begun in the previous volumes on the topic." Metin I. Eren, Kent State University, USA
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