Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of Western Europe this process continued across prehistory and was not reversed until the Roman period. However, in Italy, an increase in livestock body size occurred during the Iron Age, earlier than the Western provinces. In order to better understand the nature and timing of this early increase in animal size, this paper presents a detailed regional study of taxonomic abundance and biometric data from zooarchaeological assemblages recovered from the Po and Venetian-Friulian Plains in northern Italy. Our results demonstrate a high level of regionality in the choice of species exploited, with husbandry systems focused on different domesticates, a...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Historians traditionally assumed that husbandry had a limited role in the agrarian economy of Roman ...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Throughout the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, greater economic and political connectivity ha...
Roman conquest is known to have had a significant impact on animal husbandry across the Western prov...
In central and northern Italy, the first millennium BC was characterised by the rise of urbanism and...
The Roman occupation led to urbanisation, trade and population increases in the northwestern provinc...
This paper follows the work presented to the Conference “From Huts to Houses. Transformations of Anc...
The hypotheses explaining the changes in husbandry practices in Gaul slightly before its conquest an...
The emergence of the Neolithic in Europe represents a key moment in human history, and the domestica...
Animal management is shaped by its environmental and landscape context, but these factors are rarely...
In this article the evidence of pig exploitation in the prehistory of the Italian peninsula and Sici...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Historians traditionally assumed that husbandry had a limited role in the agrarian economy of Roman ...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Domestication of wild cattle, sheep, and pigs began a process of body size diminution. In most of We...
Throughout the Western provinces of the Roman Empire, greater economic and political connectivity ha...
Roman conquest is known to have had a significant impact on animal husbandry across the Western prov...
In central and northern Italy, the first millennium BC was characterised by the rise of urbanism and...
The Roman occupation led to urbanisation, trade and population increases in the northwestern provinc...
This paper follows the work presented to the Conference “From Huts to Houses. Transformations of Anc...
The hypotheses explaining the changes in husbandry practices in Gaul slightly before its conquest an...
The emergence of the Neolithic in Europe represents a key moment in human history, and the domestica...
Animal management is shaped by its environmental and landscape context, but these factors are rarely...
In this article the evidence of pig exploitation in the prehistory of the Italian peninsula and Sici...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Livestock husbandry played a fundamental role in the economy of ancient Mediterranean communities. I...
Historians traditionally assumed that husbandry had a limited role in the agrarian economy of Roman ...