New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE)
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Pelagonia is a mountain valley in North Macedonia that was densely occupied by early farming communities in the second
half of the 7th and early 6th millennium bce. Archaeobotanical analysis is being done on material from three sites there,
Vrbjanska Čuka, Veluška Tumba and Vlaho. This paper presents the results of archaeobotanical analyses of remains from
Pelagonia, which represent some of the oldest directly dated remains of cereals and pulses in Europe, and discusses the
results on crop diversity among Early Neolithic communities within the region. The crop spectrum was broad, with five
cereal species and several varieties, two pulses and potentially two oil crops. The diversity is slightly narrower than the
one found in southwestern Asia, Greece and Bulgaria as Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Lathyrus sativus (grass pea) and Vicia
ervilia (bitter vetch) were not present or very rare, and Triticum aestivum/durum (naked wheat) was only found in small
amounts, probably because the... early farmers were adapting their choices of crops to the different climatic conditions in
Pelagonia. On the micro-regional level we have observed that the diversity and importance of certain crops may vary in
relation to the 8.2 ka bp climate cooling event, as well as due to local environmental or cultural factors, showing the need
for finer scale analyses beyond the level of site or phase.
Keywords:
North Macedonia / cereals / pulses / Papaver somniferum / Linum usitatissimum / Early Neolithic / Neolithic expansionSource:
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 04-08-2023Publisher:
- Springer link
Institution/Community
Arheologija / ArchaeologyTY - JOUR AU - Sabanov, Amalia AU - Soteras, Raül AU - Hajdas, Irka AU - Naumov, Goce PY - 2023-08-04 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5059 AB - Pelagonia is a mountain valley in North Macedonia that was densely occupied by early farming communities in the second half of the 7th and early 6th millennium bce. Archaeobotanical analysis is being done on material from three sites there, Vrbjanska Čuka, Veluška Tumba and Vlaho. This paper presents the results of archaeobotanical analyses of remains from Pelagonia, which represent some of the oldest directly dated remains of cereals and pulses in Europe, and discusses the results on crop diversity among Early Neolithic communities within the region. The crop spectrum was broad, with five cereal species and several varieties, two pulses and potentially two oil crops. The diversity is slightly narrower than the one found in southwestern Asia, Greece and Bulgaria as Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Lathyrus sativus (grass pea) and Vicia ervilia (bitter vetch) were not present or very rare, and Triticum aestivum/durum (naked wheat) was only found in small amounts, probably because the early farmers were adapting their choices of crops to the different climatic conditions in Pelagonia. On the micro-regional level we have observed that the diversity and importance of certain crops may vary in relation to the 8.2 ka bp climate cooling event, as well as due to local environmental or cultural factors, showing the need for finer scale analyses beyond the level of site or phase. PB - Springer link T2 - Vegetation History and Archaeobotany T1 - New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE) DO - 10.1007/s00334-023-00940-2 ER -
@article{ author = "Sabanov, Amalia and Soteras, Raül and Hajdas, Irka and Naumov, Goce", year = "2023-08-04", abstract = "Pelagonia is a mountain valley in North Macedonia that was densely occupied by early farming communities in the second half of the 7th and early 6th millennium bce. Archaeobotanical analysis is being done on material from three sites there, Vrbjanska Čuka, Veluška Tumba and Vlaho. This paper presents the results of archaeobotanical analyses of remains from Pelagonia, which represent some of the oldest directly dated remains of cereals and pulses in Europe, and discusses the results on crop diversity among Early Neolithic communities within the region. The crop spectrum was broad, with five cereal species and several varieties, two pulses and potentially two oil crops. The diversity is slightly narrower than the one found in southwestern Asia, Greece and Bulgaria as Cicer arietinum (chickpea), Lathyrus sativus (grass pea) and Vicia ervilia (bitter vetch) were not present or very rare, and Triticum aestivum/durum (naked wheat) was only found in small amounts, probably because the early farmers were adapting their choices of crops to the different climatic conditions in Pelagonia. On the micro-regional level we have observed that the diversity and importance of certain crops may vary in relation to the 8.2 ka bp climate cooling event, as well as due to local environmental or cultural factors, showing the need for finer scale analyses beyond the level of site or phase.", publisher = "Springer link", journal = "Vegetation History and Archaeobotany", title = "New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE)", doi = "10.1007/s00334-023-00940-2" }
Sabanov, A., Soteras, R., Hajdas, I.,& Naumov, G.. (2023-08-04). New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE). in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany Springer link.. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-023-00940-2
Sabanov A, Soteras R, Hajdas I, Naumov G. New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE). in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 2023;. doi:10.1007/s00334-023-00940-2 .
Sabanov, Amalia, Soteras, Raül, Hajdas, Irka, Naumov, Goce, "New research on crop diversity of the early farmers in southeastern Europe (ca. 6400 − 5700 BCE)" in Vegetation History and Archaeobotany (2023-08-04), https://doi.org/10.1007/s00334-023-00940-2 . .