Göytepe: Neolithic Excavations in the Middle Kura Valley, Azerbaijan
edited by Yoshihiro Nishiaki and Farhad Guliyev. Hardback; 210x297mm;
384 pages; 285 figures, 37 tables (colour throughout). 708 2020. Available both in print and Open Access. Printed ISBN 9781789698787. Epublication ISBN 9781789698794.
Göytepe: Neolithic Excavations in the Middle Kura Valley, Azerbaijan,
publishes the first round of fieldwork and research (2008-2013) at this
key site for understanding the emergence and development of
food-producing communities in the South Caucasus. Situated close to the
Fertile Crescent of Southwest Asia, where Neolithisation processes
occurred earlier, research in the South Caucasus raises intriguing
research questions, including issues of diffusion from the latter and
interaction with ‘incoming’ Neolithic communities as well as the
possibility of independent local Neolithisation processes. In order to
address these issues in the South Caucasus, a joint Azerbaijan–Japan
research programme was launched in 2008 to investigate Göytepe, one of
the largest known Neolithic mounds in the South Caucasus. The results of
the first phase of the project (2008-2013) presented here provide rich
archaeological data from multi-disciplinary perspectives: chronology,
architecture, technology, social organisation, and plant and animal
exploitation, to name a few. This volume is the first to present these
details in a single report of the South Caucasian Neolithic site using a
high-resolution chronology based on dozens of radiocarbon dates.
About the Editors
Yoshihiro Nishiaki, who received his BA and MA from the
University of Tokyo and PhD from University College London, is a
professor of prehistoric archaeology at the University of Tokyo and
Director of its University Museum. His research involves the prehistory
of Southwest Asia and its neighbouring regions through fieldwork and
archaeological analyses of material remains. He has directed a number of
field campaigns at Palaeolithic and Neolithic sites in Syria, Iran,
Azerbaijan, and Uzbekistan. The Neolithisation processes of the South
Caucasus have been a major target of his research in the past few
decades. ;
Farhad Guliyev, a graduate of the Baku State University of the
Republic of Azerbaijan, received his PhD from the Azerbaijan National
Academy of Sciences (ANAS) and currently serves as Director of the
Museum of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, ANAS. His major
research interests lie in the socio-economic development of the South
Caucasus from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. His recent international
field projects besides Göytepe include the Neolithic sites of Hacı
Elamxanlıtepe, Menteshtepe and Kiciktepe, also in western Azerbaijan.
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