首页
登录
职称英语
MESOLITHIC COMPLEXITY IN SCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHIC COMPLEXITY IN SCANDINAVIA
游客
2024-01-02
65
管理
问题
MESOLITHIC COMPLEXITY IN SCANDINAVIA
(1)The European Mesolithic (roughly the period from 8000 B.C. to 2700 B.C.) testifies to a continuity in human culture from the times of the Ice Age. [A] This continuity, however, was based on continuous adjustment to environmental changes following the end of the last glacial period (about 12,500 years ago). [B] Three broad subdivisions within the northern Mesolithic are known in Scandinavia. [C] The Maglemose Period (7500 B.C.—5700 B.C.) was a time of seasonal exploitation of rivers and lakes, combined with terrestrial hunting and foraging. [D] The sites from the Kongemose Period (5700 B.C.—4600 B.C.) are mainly on the Baltic Sea coasts, along bays and near lagoons, where the people exploited both marine and terrestrial resources. Many Kongemose sites are somewhat larger than Maglemose ones. The Ertebolle Period (4600 B.C.—3200 B.C.) was the culmination of Mesolithic culture in southern Scandinavia.
(2) By the Ertebolle Period, the Scandinavia were occupying coastal settlements year-round and subsisting on a very wide range of food sources. These included forest game and waterfowl, shellfish, sea mammals, and both shallow-water and deepwater fish. There were smaller, seasonal coastal sites, too, for specific activities such as deepwater fishing, sealing, or hunting of migratory birds. One such site, the Aggersund site in Denmark, was occupied for short periods of time in the autumn, when the inhabitants collected oysters and hunted some game, especially migratory swans. Ertebolle technology was far more elaborate than that of its Mesolithic predecessors. A wide variety of antler, bone, and wood tools for socialized purposes such as fowling and sea-mammal hunting were developed, including dugout canoes up to ten meters long.
(3) Sedentary settlement comes evidence of greater social complexity in the use of cemeteries for burials and changes in burial practices. The trend toward more sedentary settlement, the cemeteries, and the occasional social differentiation revealed by elaborate burials are all reflections of an intensified use of resources among these relatively affluent hunter-gatherers of 3000 B.C. Mesolithic societies that intensified the food quest by exploiting many more species, making productive use of migratory waterfowl and their breeding grounds, and collecting shellfish in enormous numbers. This intensification is also reflected in a much more elaborate and diverse technology, more exchanges of goods and materials between neighbors, greater variety in settlement types, and a slowly rising population throughout southern Scandinavia. These phenomena may, in part, be a reflection of rising sea levels throughout the Mesolithic that flooded many cherished territories. There are signs, too, of regional variations in artifact forms and styles,
indicative of
culture differences between people living in well-delineated territories and competing for resources.
(4) Mesolithic cultures are much less well-defined elsewhere in Europe, partly because the climatic changes were less extreme than in southern Scandinavia and partly because there were fewer opportunities for coastal adaptation. In much of central Europe, settlement was
confined to
lakeside and riverside locations, widely separated from one another by dense forests. Marry Mesolithic lakeside sites were located in transitional zones between different environments so that the inhabitants could return to a central base location, where for much of the year they lived close to predictable resources such as lake fish However they would exploit both forest game and other seasonal resources from satellite camps. For example, the archaeologist Michael Jochim believes that some groups lived during most of the year in camps along the Danube River in central Europe, moving to summer encampments on the shores of neighboring lakes, In areas like Spain, there appears to have been intensified exploitation of marine and forest resources. There was a trend nearly everywhere toward greater variety in the diet, with more attention being paid to less obvious foods and to those that require more complex processing methods than do game and other such resources.
(5) Thus, in part of Europe, there was a long-term trend among hunter-gatherer societies toward a more extensive exploitation of food resources, often within the context of a strategy that sought ways to minimize the impact of environmental uncertainty.
In more favored southern Scandinavia, such societies achieved a new level of social complexity that was to become commonplace among later farming peoples, and this preadaptation proved an important catalyst for rapid economic and social changes when fanning did come to Europe.
[br] The phrase "indicative of" in the passage is closest in meaning to________.
选项
A、suggesting
B、leading to
C、resulting from
D、decreasing
答案
A
解析
本题属于词汇题,考查考生对indicative of的理解。题干所问词组意为“表明”,A项suggesting意为“表明、说明”,和题干所问单词意思最为接近,故选。B项leading to“导致”、C项resulting from“由……引起”和D项decreasing“减少”都和题干所问单词意思无关,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3327374.html
相关试题推荐
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
MESOLITHICCOMPLEXITYINSCANDINAVIA
随机试题
SusanSontag(1933—2004)wasoneofthemostnoticeablefiguresintheworld
年度热词(annualhotword)是互联网时代产生的一种新的文化景观(culturallandscape)。自2009年开始的每年年末,主流报纸、
1920年,陈独秀等建立的中国共产党早期组织是()A.北京共产主义小组 B.上
计算夏普比率需要的基础变量不包括( )。A.无风险收益率 B.投资组合的系统
属于一期止血缺陷筛查试验的是A.凝血酶原时间测定B.血浆6-酮-前列腺素F1αC
生理性黄疸时,血清胆红素足月儿不超过A.221μmol/L B.257μmol
社会工作实务中,制订服务计划的原则不包括()。A.有服务对象的参与 B.
Murphy征阳性常见于 A.急性胆囊炎B.急性胰腺炎C.胰头癌D.急性
融资专用账户用于记录()。 A.证券公司持有的拟向客户融出的证券和客户归还的
银行承兑汇票的承兑银行,应当按照票面金额向出票人收取()的手续费。A:千分之一
最新回复
(
0
)