%0 Journal Article %A Ramstein, Marianne %A Steuri, Noah %A Brönnimann, David %A Rentzel, Philippe %A Cornelissen, Marcel %A Schimmelpfennig, Dirk %A Anselmetti, Flavio S. %A Häberle, Simone %A Vandorpe, Patricia %A Siebke, Inga %A Furtwängler, Anja %A Szidat, Sönke %A Hafner, Albert %A Krause, Johannes %A Lösch, Sandra %+ Archaeogenetics, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society MHAAM, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society %T The well-preserved Late Neolithic dolmen burial of Oberbipp, Switzerland: construction, use, and post-depositional processes : %G eng %U https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-563A-5 %R 10.1016/j.jasrep.2022.103397 %7 2022-03-05 %D 2022 %* Review method: peer-reviewed %X Excavation of the Late Neolithic dolmen of Oberbipp BE, Steingasse in the Swiss Central Plateau provided a unique opportunity for a comprehensive study of the archaeological and anthropological evidence. In multidisciplinary studies, we investigated the processes at work during construction, use, and abandonment of the megalithic structure, as well as the dietary habits, subsistence strategy, and possible mobility of the Neolithic population. Archaeological methods included micromorphology, archaeobiology, typology, use-wear analysis, and geology. The anthropological investigation was complemented by an analysis of stable isotope ratios and palaeogenetics. Local topography and the cover of alluvial sediments ensured an extraordinary conservation of the monument. It allowed the preservation of the human remains of at least 42 individuals of both sexes and all ages. The observation of the sedimentary and post-depositional processes, supplemented by an extensive series of radiocarbon dates, allowed us to reconstruct the history of the dolmen in its environment and the definition of at least two deposition phases. We found genetic evidence of lactase intolerance, a local population with a mixed ancestry of early Anatolian farmers and Western hunter-gatherers, and a crop-based diet. Sparse remains of a nearby Late Neolithic settlement sustain the interpretation that this is the burial site of a local farming community. Evidence of higher mobility of females and kinship over three generations solely in the paternal line suggests a virilocal community. Bone-altering pathologies support the assumption of a caring society. %K Dolmen, Collective burial, Late Neolithic, Megalithic funerary monument, Construction history, Landscape, Physical anthropology, Palaeogenetics, Bioarchaeology %Z 1. Introduction 1.1. Context 1.2. Discovery and excavation 1.3. Topography and geology 1.4. Aim of the study 2. Materials and methods 2.1. Archaeology 2.2. Soil micromorphology and geology 2.3. Archaeobotany and archaeozoology 2.4. Anthropology and molecular genetics 2.5. Radiocarbon dating 3. Results 3.1. Site occupation 3.2. The monument 3.3. The burials 3.4. Associated artefacts 3.5. Archaeozoology and archaeobotany 4. Discussion 4.1. Limitations of the study 4.2. Landscape history 4.3. The regional burial tradition in the late fourth millennium 4.4. Construction and use of the monument 4.5. Standing stones and further monuments 4.6. Animal activity, human disturbances, erosion, and destruction 4.7. Population and mobility 4.8. Conclusions %J Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports %V 42 %] 103397 %I Elsevier %C Amsterdam [u.a.] %@ 2352-409X