With the SYMBOL AND STONE project I could demonstrate and explain symbolic transmission and social transformation as a complex and selective process, which took place and affected simultaneously both interregional and local conditions in Neolithic Europe. The megalithic art sequence started in the 5th millennium cal BC in the bay of Morbihan in Brittany with the richest sign inventory and the most complex combinations of symbols in the whole working area. Symbols were transferred outgoing from Brittany to Galicia, the Alentejo and to Huelva. The transmission of symbols between these regions indicates transcultural maritime interaction and encounters in all its variety from journeys to population migrations, the transmission of a similar cosmological worldview and a shared symbolic identity. By comparing the transfer of symbols and Atlantic transcultural encounters with seafaring nations in the Pacific and their transfer of images (e.g. Mageo & Hermann 2017), I could theorize and discuss models of mental and emotional reactions of encounters between Atlantic inhabitants and their visitors. The application of new documentation and visualisation technologies in the test regions Brittany and Andalusia (structure for motion, laser scanning, XRF-spectrometry, D-stretch) showed to be a resounding success. At a part of the investigated sites I could identify new, formerly unknown signs and re-interpret some of the symbols (several papers in preparation). Beside an examination of the representational significance of the motifs, it was important to consider the performative nature of these representations. In the whole working region, there is evidence for the re-use of carved standing stones as building material for the graves incorporating ancient stones and symbols as a way of empowerment. The symbols and the megalithic art represent visualized rituals, narratives and myths in order to perform collected memories and so to create tradition and the identity of a group.
CASSEN, S. (ed.) (2018). Variscite Turquoise in Neolithic Europe: nature, origin, exploitation, circulation, utilization (Archaeopress: Oxford).
SCHULZ PAULSSON, B. (2018). Megaliths in Europe: new evidence from radiocarbon dating and Bayesian modelling support maritime diffusion model, PNAS
SCHULZ PAULSSON, B., CASSEN, S., VAQUER, J.S. RÉLLAN, C., MOLIST, M., FAUSTINO CARVALHO, A., BOSCH, J. (2018a). Time of the callais: radiocarbon chronology and Bayesian modelling. In: Cassen, S. (ed.), Variscite Turquoise in Neolithic Europe: nature, origin, exploitation, circulation, utilization (Archaeopress: Oxford).
SCHULZ PAULSSON, B. (2017). Time and Stone: the Emergence and Development of Megaliths and Megalithic Societies in Europe (Archaeopress: Oxford).