Authors
Katharina Dulias, M George B Foody, Pierre Justeau, Marina Silva, Rui Martiniano, Gonzalo Oteo-García, Alessandro Fichera, Simão Rodrigues, Francesca Gandini, Alison Meynert, Kevin Donnelly, Timothy J Aitman, Scottish Genomes Partnership, Andrew Chamberlain, Olivia Lelong, George Kozikowski, Dominic Powlesland, Clive Waddington, Valeria Mattiangeli, Daniel G Bradley, Jaroslaw Bryk, Pedro Soares, James F Wilson, Graeme Wilson, Hazel Moore, Maria Pala, Ceiridwen J Edwards, Martin B Richards
Publication date
2022/2/22
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
119
Issue
8
Pages
e2108001119
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Orkney was a major cultural center during the Neolithic, 3800 to 2500 BC. Farming flourished, permanent stone settlements and chambered tombs were constructed, and long-range contacts were sustained. From ∼3200 BC, the number, density, and extravagance of settlements increased, and new ceremonial monuments and ceramic styles, possibly originating in Orkney, spread across Britain and Ireland. By ∼2800 BC, this phenomenon was waning, although Neolithic traditions persisted to at least 2500 BC. Unlike elsewhere in Britain, there is little material evidence to suggest a Beaker presence, suggesting that Orkney may have developed along an insular trajectory during the second millennium BC. We tested this by comparing new genomic evidence from 22 Bronze Age and 3 Iron Age burials in northwest Orkney with Neolithic burials from across the archipelago. We identified signals of inward migration on …
Total citations
2022202320248146
Scholar articles
K Dulias, MGB Foody, P Justeau, M Silva, R Martiniano… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022