A shoreline people forged from ancient foragers
Wind and water shaped the first Comb Ceramic enclaves along the northeastern Baltic. Archaeological data from Kudruküla (Ida‑Viru County; Narva‑Jõesuu Municipality) place human activity here between ca. 3785 and 3376 BCE, squarely within the wider Neolithic Comb Ceramic tradition that spread across Finland, the eastern Baltic, and parts of northwestern Russia.
Material culture—thin, organic‑tempered pottery imprinted with comb impressions, microlithic stone tools and evidence of seasonal camps—speaks to long familiarity with coastal and riverine resources. Radiocarbon and stratigraphic work at this and comparable sites indicate repeated occupation rather than a single settlement episode.
Limited evidence suggests the local manifestation at Kudruküla represents a continuation of Mesolithic subsistence adapted to Neolithic technologies rather than a wholesale replacement by incoming farming communities. The archaeological picture is fragmentary but evocative: hearths near the shore, pottery fragments rubbed smooth by use, and discarded fish and elk bones hint at a resilient, mobile lifeway anchored to the sea and river.
Bulleted signals from the field:
- Comb‑impressed pottery and microliths define the cultural horizon.
- Coastal location indicates a mixed economy centered on fishing and foraging.
- Radiocarbon range 3785–3376 BCE ties the local site to the broader Comb Ceramic phenomenon.