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Jones et al. (2017) determined, based on one sample (6467-6250 BC) from the Kunda culture and another one from the succeeding Narva culture, closer genetic affinity with Western Hunter-Gatherers (WHGs) than Eastern Hunter-Gatherers (EHGs). [3] Mittnik et al. (2018) analyzed the remains of a male and female ascribed to the Kunda culture.
Kunda is a town in Viru-Nigula Parish, Lääne-Viru County, Estonia, located on the coast of the Gulf of Finland. Kunda is best known for its cement factory, port, and archaeological heritage. Kunda is best known for its cement factory, port, and archaeological heritage.
The Kunda Culture received its name from the Lammasmäe settlement site in northern Estonia, which dates from earlier than 8500. [2] Bone and stone artifacts similar to those found at Kunda have been discovered elsewhere in Estonia, as well as in Latvia, Russia, northern Lithuania and southern Finland.
Kunda culture; N. Narva culture This page was last edited on 9 August 2023, at 02:55 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
Tools of Kunda Culture. Early Holocene coastal settlements and palaeoenvironment on the shore of the Baltic Sea at Pärnu, southwestern Estonia.. Studies were conducted on 16 sections of buried organic matter (pre-Ancylus Lake and pre-Littorina Sea) and associated Stone Age cultural layers in the Pärnu area of southwestern Estonia.
Kunda people, a Bantu-speaking ethnic group in Mozambique, Zambia, and Zimbabwe; Kunda culture, an archaeological culture classification, first discovered near Kunda, Estonia; Touré Kunda, a Senegalese band; Kunda, one of many names of a Temple tank, a well or reservoir built as part of Indian temple complexes
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The Narva culture or eastern Baltic was a European Neolithic archaeological culture in present-day Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Kaliningrad Oblast (former East Prussia), and adjacent portions of Poland, Belarus and Russia. A successor of the Mesolithic Kunda culture, the Narva culture continued up to the start of the Bronze Age.