Bromme culture

In this article, the topic of Bromme culture will be addressed from different perspectives, with the aim of analyzing its importance and relevance today. We will explore the various implications that Bromme culture has on our society, as well as its impact on people's daily lives. In addition, different points of view from experts and professionals in the field will be presented, in order to enrich the debate and offer a more complete and objective vision about Bromme culture. Likewise, concrete examples will be examined to illustrate the influence of Bromme culture in different areas, and possible solutions or recommendations will be proposed to adequately manage the challenges that Bromme culture currently poses. Ultimately, this article aims to deepen knowledge about Bromme culture and encourage a constructive debate around its importance and repercussions on our society.

A Bromme culture arrow head

The Bromme culture (Danish: Brommekultur) is a late Upper Paleolithic culture dated to c. 11,600 to 9,800 cal BC, which corresponds to the second half of the Allerød Oscillation.

Only a few carbon 14 datings have been made of the Bromme hunters. These dates fall within the second half of the Allerød period. The development of the litic technology, is unbroken development from the Federmesser hunters in beginning of the Allerød. At the beginning of the Younger Dryas, the transition Ahrensburg culture is smooth.

At this time, reindeer was the most important prey, but the Bromme people also hunted moose/elk, wolverine and beaver. The landscape was a combination of taiga and tundra.

The culture is named after a settlement at Bromme in western Zealand, and it is known from several settlements in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein. In Sweden, it is known from the settlement at Segebro, near Malmö, but also from Uppåkra and Vångamossen at lake Finja in northern Scania.

Almost all tools were made of sturdy lithic flakes. The tools were awls (sticklar), scrapers, and tanged points. Stone axes were missing.

Bromme culture

The Bromme hunters lived in varied environment and the settlements they have left us are different. One single settlement is not enough to create a robust picture of Bromme people’s life. Their activities lasted all year round, but we have not discovered settlements from the winter periods—even settlements with favorable conservation conditions provide no information to solve this dilemma. The Bromme hunters lived in a young, fast-developing ecosystem. The environment changed rapidly. No fixed living place in the landscape could provide food all year long. They probably split into small grops to master the seasonal variations in food supplies. Other times of the year, they lived in a larger group at other places. This model of living corresponds to the currents seasonal migrations within Greenland, where many families traveled into the fjords from July-August-September, and then wander inland to campsites by lakes and rivers, which they used year after year.

In the end of summer they lived again by the seacoast with reindeer skins and meat from the hunting parties. Bromme hunters maybe met with other families out on the coast. At these gatherings they hunted together, married with wives, told each others stories and exchange myths. We do not know much of these larger settlements which are now below sea level. Our gathered information of the Bromme hunters is still in its beginning, the same as it has been for several millennia. Underwater archaeology is a possible solution for this problem, once it has been further developed.

References

  1. ^ Carbon 14 dating is available from two places at Holmegaårds Mose. The first dates to 11,050 BC, and the second to 10,760 BC. Se Park- og skovtundraens jægere
  2. ^ Nationalencyklopedin Band 3 Bit-Car 1990 p 334
  3. ^ "Park- og skovtundraens jægere | lex.dk". Danmarks Oldtid (in Danish). 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  • Jørgen Jensen: Danmarks Oldtid, Stenalder 13.000-2.000 f.Kr., Gyldendal 2001, p. 66ff