Bonnanaro culture


The Bonnanaro culture is a protohistoric culture that flourished in Sardinia during the 2nd millennium BC, considered to be the first stage of the Nuragic civilization. It takes its name from the comune of Bonnanaro in the province of Sassari where in 1889 the eponymous site was discovered.

Chronology

The Bonnanaro culture is divided chronologically into two main phases:
PhaseDates
Bonnanaro A1 Corona Moltana1800–1650 BC
Bonnanaro A2 Sant'Iroxi1650–1600 BC

Origin

According to Giovanni Lilliu the people who produced this culture probably originated in Central Europe and the Polada culture/Rhône culture area. From a material culture point of view, the Bonnanaro culture shows influences of the preceding pan-European Bell Beaker culture, the post-Beaker Polada culture from northern Italy, the Remedello culture, Rinaldone culture and El Argar culture.
M.Perra theorizes a season of conflict between the Chalcolithic natives and the groups of Beaker heritage which caused a general involution, typical of this historical phase.

Description

Bonnanaro sites, mostly burials, are scattered throughout Sardinian territory, with a higher concentration in the mining regions of Nurra and Sulcis-Iglesiente and in the Campidano. Ceramics were smooth and linear without decorations and characterized by handles. Numbers of metal objects increased and the first swords of arsenical bronze appeared.
Only four settlements of this culture are known: Su Campu Lontanu Florinas, Sa Turricula Muros, Costa Tana Bonarcado and Abiti Teti. The houses had a base of masonry while the roof was made of wood and branches.
It is still uncertain whether the first "protonuraghi" or "pseudonuraghi" were built at this time, or in the successive Sub-Bonnanaro culture of the Middle Bronze Age, although C14 on organic finds from the Protonuraghe Bruncu Madugui suggest that it was built sometime around 1820 BC. The Proto-Nuraghi were megalithic edifices which are considered the precursors of the classic Nuraghi. They are horizontal buildings characterized by a long corridor with rooms and cells.
The Bonnanaro grave typologies include the domus de janas, caves, cists and allée couvertes.

Physical anthropology

About 200 human skeletons of the period show that the Bonnanaro population was composed mainly of dolicochepalic individuals with a minority of brachycephalics, the latter concentrated in the north-western portion of the island. The average height was 1.62 m for men and 1.59 m for women. The Bonnanaro population suffered from osteoporosis, hyperostosis, anemia, caries and tumors. Cranial trepannation was practiced.
A study by G. D'Amore, S. Di Marco, G. Floris, E. Pacciani, and E. Sanna from 2010, which analyzed craniofacial morphometric variations in Sardinia from the Late Neolithic to the present, found a lower morphological differentiation between the populations of the Bonnanaro culture and the contemporary samples from the Italian Peninsula compared to earlier and later Sardinian populations.

Paleogenetics

A 2022 study by Marjusha Chintalapati et al. found evidences of moderate steppe-related ancestry in some of the Early Bronze Age Sardinians from the North-West and Central part of the Island.
SampleWestern Hunter-GatherersEarly European FarmersWestern Steppe Herders
SUC00116,2%80%3,8%-
SUC00520,9%77,8%1,3%-
SUC00721,5%68,1%10,4%-
SUC00917,8%79,4%2,8%-
S125018,5%69,7%11,8%-
S125217,9%78,3%3,8%-
ISB00113,6%78,1%8,2%-
PJU00224,7%74%1,3%-

- Data from Manjusha Chintalapati, Nick Patterson, Priya Moorjani. Table J: qpAdm analysis of Neolithic Bronze Age groups per individual
Genetic data appears to support the hypothesis of a patrilocal society.