TY - JOUR KW - Craft KW - Geomaterials KW - Long-distance trade KW - Neolithic Serra d’Alto culture KW - Square-mouthed pottery culture KW - ware AU - Didier Binder AU - Jean-Marc Lardeaux AU - Michel Dubar AU - Gilles Durrenmath AU - Italo Muntoni AU - Suzanne Jacomet AU - Gabriel Monge AU - Cédric Lepère AB - In the framework of the reassessment of the Neolithic Square-Mouthed Pottery series from locus P8, Lare 2 cave (Saint-Benoit, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, South-eastern France), two sherds were identified as possible replicas or importations of fine painted ware (i.e. figulina) from Serra d’Alto contexts (Southern Italy). Combining geological and chemical methods (thin section analysis, microprobe, XR diffraction, XR fluorescence and Scanning Electron Microscopy), a transdisciplinary study was designed for the characterization of the archaeological ceramics and the identification of the clay resources used in their manufacture. The results allow the authors to discount production using a local clay resource. Instead, they support the hypothesis that pottery was traded over a distance of 1200 km, from southern Italy to the Alps. This new data highlights the demand for the products of the Serra d’Alto workshops, which mastered kiln production, as well as the spatial extension and the intensity of intercultural networks during the Early/Middle 5th millennium BCE, a time of increasing social complexity in Europe. BT - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports DO - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2018.07.012 N2 - In the framework of the reassessment of the Neolithic Square-Mouthed Pottery series from locus P8, Lare 2 cave (Saint-Benoit, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, South-eastern France), two sherds were identified as possible replicas or importations of fine painted ware (i.e. figulina) from Serra d’Alto contexts (Southern Italy). Combining geological and chemical methods (thin section analysis, microprobe, XR diffraction, XR fluorescence and Scanning Electron Microscopy), a transdisciplinary study was designed for the characterization of the archaeological ceramics and the identification of the clay resources used in their manufacture. The results allow the authors to discount production using a local clay resource. Instead, they support the hypothesis that pottery was traded over a distance of 1200 km, from southern Italy to the Alps. This new data highlights the demand for the products of the Serra d’Alto workshops, which mastered kiln production, as well as the spatial extension and the intensity of intercultural networks during the Early/Middle 5th millennium BCE, a time of increasing social complexity in Europe. PY - 2018 SP - 222 EP - 237 T2 - Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports TI - South-eastern Italian transfers towards the Alps during the 5th millennium BCE: Evidence of “Serra-d’Alto” ware within Square-Mouthed Pottery deposits at the Lare 2 cave (Saint-Benoit, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France) UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352409X18301081 VL - 21 SN - 2352-409X ER -