Amirkhanov, H. (ed.). Palaeolithic studies in Zaraysk 1999-2005.
Jordan, Peter
AMIRKHANOV, H. (ed.). Palaeolithic studies in Zaraysk 1999-2005.
466 pages, 178 colour & b&w illustrations, 4 loose maps inside
back cover, 36 tables. 2009. Moscow: Paleograph; 978-5-89526-022-5
hardback (in Russian with 30 pp. summaries and illustration captions in
English).
Archaeologists will enthusiastically welcome this major
contribution to the literature on the Upper Palaeolithic of the Russian
Plain. Published in Russian, this handsome book focuses on the results
of recent excavations at Zaraysk (1999-2005), complete with lengthy
English chapter summaries which generally do justice to the core Russian
text. The figures, diagrams and truly breathtaking colour plates are
also fully supported by detailed English captions, which are however
hidden away at the back of the book. Working between the chapter
summaries and the list of captions, non-Russian readers should easily
gain access to the main results of recent field seasons. The
editor's attention to detail is impressive--for example, the
English captions include Cyrillic letters when needed, making it
possible to see exactly how the captions relate to elements of the
Russian figures.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Zaraysk is an open-air Upper Palaeolithic site located on bluffs
above the River Osetr, about 155km southeast of Moscow. Since its
discovery in 1980 the site has been investigated under the direction of
Professor Hizri Amirkhanov of the Institute of Archaeology, Russian
Academy of Sciences, Moscow, and work has continued unabated to the
present. Summaries of earlier field seasons have mostly been published
in Russian, but a series of short reports have begun to appear in
English, mainly announcing the string of remarkable figurative art
finds, for which this once rather unassuming site is now becoming
increasingly well known. Readers will recall the discovery in 2001 of a
beautiful bison statuette (Amirkhanov & Lev 2002) and later of
further female figurines (e.g. Amirkhanov & Lev 2008: fig. 4).
The book consists of seven core chapters; when working through them
itis worth bearing in mind that the Zaraysk 'site' covers four
areas (A-D) and that the chapters focus only on area A (Zaraysk A or
Zone 4 in Amirkhanov & Lev 2008: fig. 1). The excavations have
revealed four distinct occupation layers, with analysis of the finds
from the different levels presented in this and other publications. As a
result, the focus of individual chapters in this volume tends to skip
between levels, which can initially be confusing. Moreover, each chapter
is written by different sets of specialist(s), and there is lime
attempt--beyond a short preface--to provide a fuller
'interpretation' of the site beyond rehearsing each
chapter's main conclusions and the fact that Zaraysk exhibits many
similarities with the Kostenki-Avdeevo culture of the Russian Plain.
Chapter 1 (Amirkhanov) concentrates on describing the features of
the newly-excavated Level 3 (dated roughly to 20 000 years BP). This
later phase marks a major shifi in settlement structure, and the
numerous storage pits and pit houses that characterised Layer 2
virtually disappear, a trend also observed in the Kostenki-Avdeevo
culture and possibly reflecting worsening climatic conditions.
Chapters 2 (Lev) and 3 (Amirkhanov et al.) focus on the rich stone
and worked bone assemblages, which interestingly appear to show general
continuity in tradition despite the major changes in settlement
structure noted above. English-readers will welcome the copious
illustrations: Zaraysk has yielded over 100 000 lithics, from finished
tools to production waste. The authors demonstrate close links with the
Kostenki-Avdeevo culture and the larger Eastern Gravettian entity, while
intriguing patterns in the proportion of waste flakes also suggest that
Zaraysk is closer to raw material sources. The rich assemblage of worked
bone (generally mammoth tusk and rib, and mainly from Layer 2 at Zaraysk
A) are also considered typical of Kostenki-Avdeevo habitation complexes.
Chapter 4 (Amirkhanov & Lev) examines Zaraysk's mobiliary art,
including the bison and female statuettes and figurative engravings.
These figurines appear to have been deliberately deposited in storage
pits; the female ones were placed in association with red ochre and pale
sand and then covered with mammoth scapulae. In this chapter, the rather
short English summary (pp. 448-51--mostly paraphrasing the reports cited
below) starts to fall out of step with the content of the Russian text,
and fails to capture details of a stimulating reflection on the broader
significance of these beautiful objects within the community's
spirituality and ritual life. Chapter 5 (Amirkhanov et al.), reporting
on a single human deciduous tooth from a Level 2 dwelling floor,
provides a further glimpse of its occupants.
Chapters 6 (Burova & Mashchenko) and 7 (Mashchenko) generate
some broader behavioural insights: adult mammoth bones and teeth
dominate the faunal assemblage of Zaraysk A (totalling c. 63 per cent of
all mammal remains from 1996-2005), but it is clear too that arctic fox,
wolf and wolverine were also trapped or hunted for their furs. The
wide-ranging analyses in Chapter 7 attempt to address enduring debates
about the general relationship between humans and mammoths during the
Upper Palaeolithic on the Russian Plain: were these communities
specialised mammoth hunters who engaged in mass kills (probably not), or
were they carcass scavengers, engaging in only occasional hunting of
isolated mammoths (probably yes) ?
Some puzzling omissions in the volume must however be noted: it
would be useful to have a location map that placed the site in a wider
setting, perhaps including the locations of the other Kostenki-Avdeevo
sites frequently mentioned in the text (see Amirkhanov & Lev 2008:
fig. 1); only one radiocarbon measurement (19 100 [+ or -] 260
(GIN-8975) on burnt bone from Hearth 3, layer 3) is listed (p. 22),
leaving many chapters to resort to approximate ages; finally, given the
radical changes in settlement structure due to climatic factors, it
would be helpful to have a more localised sense of palaeoenvironmental
changes over the time the site was occupied. Some of these gaps may
relate to the fact that the book is essentially a report on recent
progress. A future monograph could address some of these omissions and
provide a more detailed synthetic interpretation of cultural dynamics at
the site and their association with other Upper Palaeolithic sites on
the Russian Plain and beyond.
Looking ahead, large areas of the wider Zaraysk site remain
unexcavated; without doubt, the team's work will continue to make
fundamentally important contributions to our understanding of the Upper
Palaeolithic communities of the Russian Plain. With the current
publication the editor and individual authors have produced a lavishly
illustrated and intellectually stimulating book that succeeds in
reaching out to both a Russian- and English-language readership. A full
monograph will be eagerly awaited and, were its full text available in
both Russian and English, the international archaeological community
would welcome it with open arms.
References
AMIRKHANOV, H. & S. LEV. 2002. A unique Palaeolithic sculpture
from the site of Zaraysk (Russia). Antiquity 76:613-14.
--2008. New finds of art objects from the Upper Palaeolithic site
of Zaraysk, Russia. Antiquity 82: 862-70.
PETER JORDAN
Department of Archaeology, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK
(Email:
Peter.jordan@abdn.ac.uk)