Wetland deposit in the hinterland: Kihliä flint find assemblage (southeast Finland) in the framework of hunter–fisher–gatherer ritual practices in northeastern Europe in the early 4th millennium BC

Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37522/aaav.116.2025.287

Keywords:

depositional acts, artist‘ text, Neolithic pottery, wet contexts, hinterlands, Finland

Abstract

More than a century ago, a collection of flint artefacts dating to the early 4th millennium BC was discovered in Kihliä, SE Finland. In this paper, we revisit the Kihliä assemblage by reconstructing the original findspot and examining its environmental context during the suggested time of deposition. As a result, we suggest that the Kihliä artefacts were deposited in a wetland area situated in a forested hinterland, distant from known Stone Age settlement sites in the region. By placing the Kihliä assemblage within the broader context of early 4th millennium BC ritual depositional practices in northeastern Europe and by comparing these practices to those from preceding periods in the surrounding regions of Finland, we propose that the Kihliä deposit was likely a ritually marked deposit. Remarkably, landscape-wise, the Kihliä deposit differs from other ritual deposits or sites from the same period in Finland, which are typically found in shore-bound locations. Consequently, this study suggests that small inland water bodies or wetlands, as well as water routes leading into the hinterland, could also serve as significant locations for ritual activities.

Author Biographies

Marja Ahola, University of Oulu

(PhD 2019, University of Helsinki, Finland) is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oulu (Finland) and a visiting researcher at the University of Helsinki (Finland). Ahola is interested in how immaterial aspects of life, such as religion, story telling and social relationships, materialise in archaeological records. In her current project, Ahola aims to understand the role of underground burial within the cosmology of Mesolithic–Neolithic hunter–gatherers in northeastern Europe.

Satu Koivisto, University of Turku

(PhD 2017, University of Helsinki, Finland) is an archaeologist and Associate Professor (Docent of Wetland Archaeology 2022, University of Turku, Finland) and currently works as a researcher at the Lolland-Falster Museum, Denmark. Her research focuses on Nordic Mesolithic and Neolithic wetland sites and organic assets, their preservation and future survival through the development and use of innovative, interdisciplinary methods and multiproxy approaches.

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Published

16/04/2025

How to Cite

Ahola, M., & Koivisto, S. (2025). Wetland deposit in the hinterland: Kihliä flint find assemblage (southeast Finland) in the framework of hunter–fisher–gatherer ritual practices in northeastern Europe in the early 4th millennium BC: Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis. Acta Academiae Artium Vilnensis, (116), 181–212. https://doi.org/10.37522/aaav.116.2025.287