History:Kiukainen culture

From HandWiki

The Kiukainen culture was the last Stone Age culture of the southwestern coast of Finland , dating to 2400–1500/1300 BC.[1] Its material culture combined elements from Pit–Comb Ware and Corded Ware cultures.[2] The area of Kiukainen culture ranged from the shore of Kvarken to Vyborg Bay.[3] Kiukainen culture is named after the Kiukainen municipality where the Finnish archaeologist Matti Kauppinen found the first artifacts .[4]

References

  1. Cerezo-Román, Jessica; Williams, Howard; Wessman, Anna (2017-04-27). Cremation and the Archaeology of Death. Oxford University Press. pp. 206–. ISBN 9780198798118. https://books.google.com/books?id=M92PDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA206. Retrieved 17 October 2017. 
  2. "Kiukaisten kulttuuri". National Museum of Finland. http://www.kansallismuseo.fi/fi/kansallismuseo/opetus/opetuspaketit/esihistoria/tietoa/kivikausi/9. 
  3. "Kiukaisten keramiikka". University of Helsinki. 25 March 1999. http://www.helsinki.fi/hum/arla/keram/kiukais.html. 
  4. Räty, Jouko (1988). "Arkeologisen kokoelman alku Satakunnan Museossa". Muinaistutkija (The Archaeological Society of Finland) (3): 12. https://www.academia.edu/597748/_Ahvola_1918_Archaeological_Reconnaissance_of_a_Finnish_Civil_War_Battlefield_2009_. Retrieved 8 March 2020. 

Additional sources