Current knowledge of the beginnings of crop cultivation in Lithuania is based mainly on Cerealia-type pollen data supplemented by other indirect evidence such as agricultural tools. We argue that these records, predating carbonized remains of cultivated plants, are not substantial enough indicators of the early stages of agriculture in Lithuania. Here, we demonstrate that the macroremains of cultural plants that were previously reported from two Neolithic settlements in Lithuania were either mistakenly identified as domestic crops or incorrectly ascribed to the Neolithic period due to movement through the stratigraphic sequence and the absence of direct dating of cereal grains. Furthermore, we present a charred Hordeum vulgare grain from th...
In this paper, we report newly obtained data on cereals from the Neolithic to Bronze Age from the no...
Intensive archaeobotanical research in northern Greece and other circum-Mediterranean regions over t...
With the arrival of the Early Neolithic Globular Amphora and CordedWare cultures into the southeaste...
The Early Bronze Age (1800–1100 cal BC) is among one of the most poorly understood prehistoric perio...
Lithuanian archeologists claim that the rise of the Bronze Age in the Lithuanian area could be delim...
Almost all of the crop plants recorded for the entire Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods of Bulgari...
Abstract Broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) is not one of the founder crops domesticated in Sou...
Investigation of the incipience of agriculture in Greece employing archaeobotanical remains is a cha...
Investigation of the incipience of agriculture in Greece employing archaeobotanical remains is a cha...
2006–2014 m. straipsnio autoriaus vykdyti kasinėjimai Šventojoje ir Nidoje, ankstesnės pajūrio akmen...
Prehistoric agriculture and vegetation in Lithuania have so far been reconstructed largely using pal...
© 2017, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. For the interpretation of the transition process to the Europe...
International audienceAlong with ceramics production, sedentism, and herding, agriculture is a major...
Middle and Late Neolithic (4200–2000 cal BC) of the Lithuanian coast are well known because of dozen...
Cultivation of broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) was a widespread practice in later European p...
In this paper, we report newly obtained data on cereals from the Neolithic to Bronze Age from the no...
Intensive archaeobotanical research in northern Greece and other circum-Mediterranean regions over t...
With the arrival of the Early Neolithic Globular Amphora and CordedWare cultures into the southeaste...
The Early Bronze Age (1800–1100 cal BC) is among one of the most poorly understood prehistoric perio...
Lithuanian archeologists claim that the rise of the Bronze Age in the Lithuanian area could be delim...
Almost all of the crop plants recorded for the entire Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods of Bulgari...
Abstract Broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) is not one of the founder crops domesticated in Sou...
Investigation of the incipience of agriculture in Greece employing archaeobotanical remains is a cha...
Investigation of the incipience of agriculture in Greece employing archaeobotanical remains is a cha...
2006–2014 m. straipsnio autoriaus vykdyti kasinėjimai Šventojoje ir Nidoje, ankstesnės pajūrio akmen...
Prehistoric agriculture and vegetation in Lithuania have so far been reconstructed largely using pal...
© 2017, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. For the interpretation of the transition process to the Europe...
International audienceAlong with ceramics production, sedentism, and herding, agriculture is a major...
Middle and Late Neolithic (4200–2000 cal BC) of the Lithuanian coast are well known because of dozen...
Cultivation of broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum L.) was a widespread practice in later European p...
In this paper, we report newly obtained data on cereals from the Neolithic to Bronze Age from the no...
Intensive archaeobotanical research in northern Greece and other circum-Mediterranean regions over t...
With the arrival of the Early Neolithic Globular Amphora and CordedWare cultures into the southeaste...