Public defence: Quantifying the use of the Norwegian coast through the Stone Age

Master Isak Roalkvam at the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History will defend his dissertation Computational modelling of the coastal Mesolithic in south-eastern Norway for the degree of philosophiae doctor (PhD).

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Over the last few decades, Norwegian Stone Age archaeology has generated an enormous amount of data. To able to get a handle on this material at even the most basic level we are dependent on digital and quantitative methods. In his thesis, Isak Roalkvam has applied and developed novel computational tools for engaging with this data, with the aim of improving our understanding of the Mesolithic period which encompasses the first five thousand years of human settlement in Norway.

 

A main focus in the thesis has been to combine geological reconstructions of past sea-level change with the location of prehistoric settlements, to assess how people have adjusted to the at times dramatic sea-level fall that has characterised south-eastern Norway throughout prehistory. By combining this with both an evaluation of the intensity of coastal settlement and the artefacts left behind at these sites, the thesis provides a window into the various ways that people have engaged with the coastal areas of south-eastern Norway through the Mesolithic.

 

Isak Roalkvam successfully defended his dissertation on February 28 2024.

Trial lecture

Designated topic: "Quantifying and qualifying climatic and cultural change in Early-to-Mid Holocene in Norway and beyond."

Evaluation committee

  • Professor Felix Riede, Aarhus University (first opponent)
  • Professor Ola Fredin, NTNU (second opponent)
  • Professor Þóra Pétursdóttir, University of Oslo (committee administrator)

Chair of the defence

Supervisors

Published Feb. 9, 2024 2:55 PM - Last modified Mar. 5, 2024 9:02 AM