The Chronology of Danish Dolmens. Results from 14C Dates on Human Bones

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Karl-Göran Sjögren
Anders Fischer

Abstract

The thousands of dolmens and long barrows spread across the Danish landscape are the earliest long-lasting expressions of architectural monumentality in Scandinavia. A series of new AMS dates on human skeletal material from several of them leads to a clarification of the generations-long debate on the relative chronology and typological evolution of this group of monuments. Earthen long barrows were raised from ca. 3700 cal BC. That is at least two centuries later than the arrival of such elements of the Neolithic world as funnel beaker pottery and domestic cattle to the region. The practice of using large stones (megaliths) for burial chambers was present by 3600 BC. Classical Urdolmen were built alongside various types of more complex dolmen chambers during the period ca. 3600–3400 BC, after which passage grave were erected.

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How to Cite
Sjögren/Fischer 2023: K.-G. Sjögren/A. Fischer, The Chronology of Danish Dolmens. Results from 14C Dates on Human Bones. JNA 25, 2023, 1–33. DOI: https://doi.org/10.12766/jna.2023.1.