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Document Details :

Title: Snakes in the Plain
Subtitle: Contextualizing Prehistoric Near Eastern Snake Symbolism and Early Human Behaviour
Author(s): ZIMMERMANN, Thomas
Journal: Anatolica
Volume: 45    Date: 2019   
Pages: 17-27
DOI: 10.2143/ANA.45.0.3286999

Abstract :
The article attempts an alternative and anthropological-based hypothesis to explain the abundance of snake motives in the Earliest Near Eastern Neolithic, contrasted with their relative scarcity in later times. The focus is mainly, but not exclusively, on the Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) of Southeast Turkey, with sites like Göbekli Tepe and Körtik Tepe having produced a huge number of snake motives applied to a variety of materials and items. The predominance of the snake motive is then related to venomous serpents being a cardinal thread to hominids and humans throughout their evolutionary history, and particularly to early farmers, where snakes were a notorious hidden danger for semi-sedentary, crop-cultivating communities.

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