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Pit–Comb Ware culture : ウィキペディア英語版 | Pit–Comb Ware culture
The Pit–Comb Ware culture Comb Ceramic culture was a northeast European culture of Pit–Comb Ware-making hunter-gatherers. It existed from around 4200 BC to around 2000 BC. The name is derived from the most common type of decoration on its ceramics, which looks like the imprints of a comb. ==Distribution== The distribution of the artifacts found includes Finnmark (Norway) in the north, the Kalix River (Sweden) and the Gulf of Bothnia (Finland) in the west and the Vistula River (Poland) in the south. In the east the Comb Ceramic pottery of northern Eurasia extends beyond the Ural mountains to the Baraba steppe adjacent to the Altai-Sayan mountain range, merging with a continuum of similar ceramic styles.〔T.Chikisheva ''Dynamics of anthropological differentiation in population of southern Western Siberia in Neolithic - Early Iron Age'', Professorial dissertation, Novosibirsk, 2010, section Conclusions () (In Russian)〕 It would include the Narva culture of Estonia and the Sperrings culture in Finland, among others. They are thought to have been essentially hunter-gatherers, though e.g. the Narva culture in Estonia shows some evidence of agriculture. Some of this region was absorbed by the later Corded Ware horizon.
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