We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the southern Levantine Pre-Pottery Neolithic A site of Dhra‘, including metric and morphological analysis of barley grains. Comparisons with other early Epi-Palaeolithic and Neolithic sites indicate that the Dhra‘ grains are larger than recorded wild specimens, but fall at the lower range of domestic species, consistent with intermediary pre-domestication cultivation status. We contextualize these results in relation to associated evidence for food storage at Dhra‘, as well as the ecology of wild plants and early crops, and processing technologies across the Levant
Çatalhöyük’s millennium-long Neolithic sequence and large archaeobotanical assemblage of stored c...
The discovery of exceptionally well-preserved plant macroremains in an early Iron Age (11th century ...
Hitherto, the earliest archaeological finds of domestic cereals in southwestern Asia have involved w...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (ca. 11,700-8250 cal. B.P.) marks ...
The Early Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (EPPNB) in southwest Asia is a fundamental period in research on t...
This paper focuses on plant use by the last hunter-gatherers in the Levant from the Last Glacial Max...
Archaeobotanical evidence from southwest Asia is often interpreted as showing that the spectrum of w...
The present study investigates the occurrence of wild grasses at Epipalaeolithic and aceramic Neolit...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
Research on the origins of agriculture in western Asia has placed great emphasis on the location and...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
International audienceThe origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological re...
Abstract. Archaeobotanical results based on a limited number of samples from three aeeramie sites da...
The protracted domestication model posits that wild cereals in southwest Asia were cultivated over m...
Çatalhöyük’s millennium-long Neolithic sequence and large archaeobotanical assemblage of stored c...
The discovery of exceptionally well-preserved plant macroremains in an early Iron Age (11th century ...
Hitherto, the earliest archaeological finds of domestic cereals in southwestern Asia have involved w...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (ca. 11,700-8250 cal. B.P.) marks ...
The Early Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (EPPNB) in southwest Asia is a fundamental period in research on t...
This paper focuses on plant use by the last hunter-gatherers in the Levant from the Last Glacial Max...
Archaeobotanical evidence from southwest Asia is often interpreted as showing that the spectrum of w...
The present study investigates the occurrence of wild grasses at Epipalaeolithic and aceramic Neolit...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
Research on the origins of agriculture in western Asia has placed great emphasis on the location and...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
International audienceThe origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological re...
Abstract. Archaeobotanical results based on a limited number of samples from three aeeramie sites da...
The protracted domestication model posits that wild cereals in southwest Asia were cultivated over m...
Çatalhöyük’s millennium-long Neolithic sequence and large archaeobotanical assemblage of stored c...
The discovery of exceptionally well-preserved plant macroremains in an early Iron Age (11th century ...
Hitherto, the earliest archaeological finds of domestic cereals in southwestern Asia have involved w...