Ancient Anatolia encompassed the area bounded by the Black Sea, Southeastern Taurus Mountains, Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, and Sea of Marmara. Much evidence of early cultures has been lost due to rising sea levels and river deposits following the last Ice Age. However, rock art and cave sites show human occupation dating back to the Upper Paleolithic period. Stratified debris in rock shelters has the potential to clarify the transition between cave dwellers and the first farming communities of the Neolithic period, which began around 9000 BCE and lasted until 6250 BCE when farming and herding were well established. The Chalcolithic period followed the Neolithic, marked by the gradual adoption of metal tools alongside stone
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Ancient Anatolia encompassed the area bounded by the Black Sea, Southeastern Taurus Mountains, Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, and Sea of Marmara. Much evidence of early cultures has been lost due to rising sea levels and river deposits following the last Ice Age. However, rock art and cave sites show human occupation dating back to the Upper Paleolithic period. Stratified debris in rock shelters has the potential to clarify the transition between cave dwellers and the first farming communities of the Neolithic period, which began around 9000 BCE and lasted until 6250 BCE when farming and herding were well established. The Chalcolithic period followed the Neolithic, marked by the gradual adoption of metal tools alongside stone
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Ancient Anatolia
Prehistoric cultures of Anatolia
Anatolia may be defined in geographic terms as the area bounded to the north by the Black Sea, to the east and south by the Southeastern Taurus Mountains and the Mediterranean Sea, and to the west by the Aegean Sea and Sea of Marmara; culturally the area also includes the islands of the eastern Aegean Sea. In most prehistoric periods the regions to the south and west of Anatolia were under the influence of, respectively, Syria and the Balkans. Much visible evidence of the earliest cultures of Anatolia may have been lost owing to the large rise in sea levels that followed the end of the last Ice Age (about 10,000 years ago) and to deposition of deep alluvium in many coastal and inland valleys. Nevertheless, there are widespread—though little studied—signs of human occupation in cave sites from at least the Upper Paleolithic Period, and earlier Lower Paleolithic remains are evident in Yarımburgaz Cave near Istanbul. Rock engravings of animals on the walls of caves near Antalya, on the Mediterranean coast, suggest a relationship with the Upper Paleolithic art of western Europe. Associated with these are rock shelters, the stratified occupational debris of which has the potential finally to clarify the transitional phases between cave-dwelling society and the Neolithic economy of the first agricultural communities. In the Middle East the first indications of the beginning of the Neolithic transition from food gathering to food producing can be dated to approximately 9000 BCE; the true Neolithic began about 7300 BCE, by which time farming and stock breeding were well established, and lasted until about 6250 BCE. The Neolithic was succeeded by the Chalcolithic Period, during which metal weapons and tools gradually took their place beside their stone prototypes, and painted pottery came generally into use. The Chalcolithic ended in the middle centuries of the 4th millennium BCE, when the invention of writing foreshadowed the rise of the great dynastic civilizations of Egypt and Mesopotamia, and was followed by periods of more advanced metalworking known as the Early and Middle Bronze Ages.