First Temperate Neolithic
The First Temperate Neolithic (FTN) is an archaeological horizon consisting of the earliest archaeological cultures of Neolithic Southeastern Europe, dated to c. 6400–5100 BCE.[1] The cultures of the FTN were the first to practice agriculture in temperate Europe, which required significant innovations in farming technology previously adapted to a mediterranean climate.[2]
The constituent cultures of the FTN are:[1]
- the Criş culture, c. 6400–5200 BCE, Romania;
 - the Karanova I/II culture, c. 6300–5100 BCE, central and southern Bulgaria;
 - the Kőrös culture, c. 6400–5100 BCE, eastern Hungary;
 - the Macedonian First Neolithic, c. 6600–5300 BCE, Macedonia;
 - the Poljanica group, c. 6300–5200 BCE, northeast Bulgaria;
 - the Starčevo culture, c. 6200–5200 BCE, Serbia, Bosnia, eastern Croatia and western Hungary;
 - and the West Bulgarian Painted Ware culture, c. 6200–5200 BCE, western Bulgaria.
 
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