Author/Authors :
Abbasnejad Seresti, Rahmat University of Mazandaran , Tashvigh, Somayeh Asadi University of Mazandaran
Abstract :
The interval between the periods of Sialk III6-7 and IV1 (3400-3300 b.c.) on the Central Plateau of Iran (hereafter, CPI)
is often introduced as an intermission in archaeological interpretations. A review of the features and changes in the architectural
structures, administrative documents, economic materials, technical tools and burial evidence belonging to Sialk III6-7 and IV1 periods
from prominent archaeological sites in this region clearly indicate that the interval between these two periods can be considered as a
transitional period, rather than as a gap. However, in this period, some sites such as Sialk, Ghabristan, Shad Qoli Khan and Qoli Darvish
are abandoned while Ozbaki and Arisman continue, albeit with shifts in occupation. Much of the archeological evidence related to the
Sialk III6-7 and IV1 periods, obtained from the ancient sites of the CPI, indicates the presence of the late Susa II culture in the region,
demonstrating a link between the CPI and the SW of Iran. These two periods are considered as transitional periods, as the similarities
among the cultural changes in Sialk III6-7 and IV1 periods are considerable. Therefore, this one-hundred-year period is placed in the
context of the transitional period.
Keywords :
Central Plateau of Iran , Transitional Periods , Sialk III6-7 , Sialk IV1