Scandinavia’s first farmers were immigrants from the south, who introduced the local hunter-gatherers to farming at the end of the Stone Age. (Photo: Colourbox)

Denmark’s first farmers were immigrants

A new study of flint axes suggests that the first farmers in southern Scandinavia were not Scandinavian hunter-gatherers; they were central European immigrants.

The agricultural revolution, which started 6,000 years ago, represented a sharp break with a hunter-gatherer culture that had existed for as long as humanity itself.

Various hypotheses have attempted to explain how Scandinavians learned to cultivate the land and where these skills originated.

A new PhD study of flint axes and flint mines now suggests that Scandinavians were taught these skills by immigrants from the south, who settled in the region and started to cultivate the land.

”Some 6,000 years ago, new agricultural power centres emerged in southern Scandinavia. These were Scandinavia’s first farmers,” says Lasse Sørensen, a PhD student at the National Museum of Denmark.

It is point-butted axes like these that Danish archaeologist Lasse Sørensen has studied. His study concludes that the first Scandinavian farmers were immigrants. Pictured on the left is a point-butted axe in flint. The one on the right is made from jade. (Photo: Lasse Sørensen)

“The people in these power centres had an approach to the use of flint axes that was different from that of contemporary hunter-gatherers. This indicates that these first Scandinavian farmers were immigrants from the south and not local hunter-gatherers who suddenly started living as farmers all by themselves.”

Sørensen recently presented the findings from his study at an international symposium on how agriculture made its way to the North, which forms part of the ‘Northern Worlds’ research project at the National Museum of Denmark.

Agriculture is complex

The great unanswered archaeological question regarding agriculture in southern Scandinavia (from northern Germany to just north of modern-day Stockholm) is, according to Sørensen, how it spread.

Did it spread solely as internal knowledge among Scandinavian hunter-gatherers who converted one by one, or was it newly-arrived farmers from the south, who taught the hunter-gatherers the practices of agriculture?

Some 6,000 years ago, new agricultural power centres emerged in southern Scandinavia. These were Scandinavia’s first farmers.

Lasse Sørensen

The researcher believes the latter of the two is a more likely scenario:

“Knowledge-based agriculture is incredibly complex. You need to take sowing times, harvesting times and livestock conditions into account. And you couldn’t afford too many failed harvests while learning the trade. When we interpret the flint axes that we’ve found in Scandinavia, we’re seeing evidence that supports the hypothesis that the Scandinavian hunter-gatherers learned the trade from immigrants from the south.”

Agriculture came from the south

As early as 7,000 years ago, the central European population started cultivating the land and keeping livestock. The milder climate gave the pioneer farmers a greater margin of error in their attempts to learn the farming trade.

In southern Scandinavia, there is also archaeological evidence of indirect contact between hunter-gatherers in Scandinavia and these new, more settled agrarian cultures to the south.

The people in these power centres had an approach to the use of flint axes that was different from that of contemporary hunter-gatherers. This indicates that these first Scandinavian farmers were immigrants from the south and not local hunter-gatherers who suddenly started living as farmers all by themselves.

Lasse Sørensen

These finds include numerous shoe-last axes (a specific type of amphibolite axe), which have found their way up to Scandinavia through various detours.

However, although there appears to have been contact between the hunter-gatherers in the north and the farmers in the south, neither livestock, corn nor agricultural knowledge was exchanged between the two cultures in the 1,000-year period during which central Europeans started living like farmers and Scandinavians started taking up this practice.

Shoe-last axes have traditionally been associated with the development of Scandinavian agriculture, but Sørensen rejects that idea:

“If the shoe-last axes were brought to southern Scandinavia by farmers, there’s no doubt that these farmers would have cultivated the land,” he says.

The Michelsberg culture was a key Neolithic culture in central Europe, dating back to approximately 4400-3500 BC. The culture stretched from Switzerland in the south to Belgium in the north.

The culture takes its name from an important excavation site on Michelsberg hill in Germany, where archaeologists have found remains of wooden buildings and ceramics. Here they have also found bones from cows, pigs, sheep, goats and dogs.

“But the land is not cultivated, so the shoe-last axes probably came here via hunter-gatherer intermediaries in northern Germany, who were in contact with both cultures. We also see no signs that Scandinavians have been particularly fascinated with the axes, as they show traces of heavy usage, and the locals did not try to make their own imitations of these axes.”

New axes, new ideas

Around 6,000 years ago, however, a revolution occurred and a new axe saw the light of day in southern Scandinavia.

As agriculture was gaining ground, the pointed-butted axe, which was specifically used for clearing forest land for agriculture, became increasingly common.

And it is this pointed-butted axe that convinced the researcher that the first Scandinavian farmers came from the south:

“The first time we see the pointed-butted flint axe is in the Michelsberg culture in northern France, southern Belgium and Holland. Originally the pointed-butted axes were made of jade, but during the late 5th millennium imitations of these axes were made in flint. A few centuries later, during the early 4th millennium, pointed-butted flint axes reached southern Scandinavia and the British Isles,” says Sørensen.

“We’re seeing something that makes the early farming societies in central Europe expand and seek new pastures. We’re assuming that this expansion was due to a population growth, which came as an effect of the blossoming farming culture. Over time, this population pressure has created a need for more land to cultivate, and that has prompted people to migrate.”

Flint mines reveal relations

The design of the pointed-butted axes is a good indicator that the first Scandinavian farmers were immigrants from the Michelsberg culture region.

The flint for the axes was procured from flint mines. This type of flint mine is known from the Michelsberg culture, whereas in Scandinavia the flint was collected along the beaches.

”These flint mines are typical of the Michelsberg culture, but they also appear in southern Scandinavia 6,000 years ago synchronic with the introduction of farming. This indicates that there have been immigrants in Scandinavia, who did things in a different way,” says the researcher.

“If it was only practical knowledge that came to Scandinavia, then the locals would probably not have made mines to get the flint. They would rather just collect it on the beaches as they had been doing in the hunter-gatherer days.”

Hunter-gatherers learned from farmers

In his study, Sørensen has collected information about finds of flint axes from throughout southern Scandinavia.

Based on the concentration of the finds, he can see that agricultural power centres were scattered around in the early days of agriculture.

He reckons that farmers living within these power centres have shared their expert knowledge with local hunter-gatherers, who learned from the new immigrants and started cultivating the land and keeping livestock themselves.

“Agriculture spread out throughout southern Scandinavia from these power centres. In some flint mines we see signs of mass production, and flint axes from these mines are distributed over a large area.

“This suggests that many flint axes have been made centrally, and then farmers have brought the axes with them when they moved to new areas which they cultivated. At the same time they have shared their farming expertise with the locals, and this is how agriculture spread from central Europe up to southern Scandinavia.”

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Read the Danish version of this article at videnskab.dk

Translated by: Dann Vinther

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