A simulation of the Neolithic transition in Western Eurasia
Carsten Lemmen, Detlef Gronenborn, Kai W. Wirtz

TL;DR
This study uses a sociocultural simulation model to analyze the Neolithic transition in Western Eurasia, exploring whether migration or cultural diffusion primarily drove the spread of farming and herding.
Contribution
The paper introduces the GLUES model to simulate and distinguish mechanisms behind the Neolithic transition, providing insights into regional sociocultural dynamics.
Findings
Indigenous agropastoralism could have developed in Mediterranean regions.
In Northern and Central Europe, transition depended on imported technology.
Both migration and cultural diffusion can explain the spread of the Neolithic in Western Europe.
Abstract
Farming and herding were introduced to Europe from the Near East and Anatolia; there are, however, considerable arguments about the mechanisms of this transition. Were it people who moved and outplaced the indigenous hunter- gatherer groups or admixed with them? Or was it just material and information that moved-the Neolithic Package-consisting of domesticated plants and animals and the knowledge of its use? The latter process is commonly referred to as cultural diffusion and the former as demic diffusion. Despite continuous and partly combined efforts by archaeologists, anthropologists, linguists, paleontologists and geneticists a final resolution of the debate has not yet been reached. In the present contribution we interpret results from the Global Land Use and technological Evolution Simulator (GLUES), a mathematical model for regional sociocultural development embedded in the…
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