Archaeobotany is the discipline that merges botany with archaeology. It is based on the study of plant fossils found in archaeological contexts with the aim to reconstruct plant use and diets of ancient populations, as well as the environment and the climate of the past, focusing on how people have adapted to them and reacted to their changes. Plant fossils include seeds and fruits (carpology), wood and charcoals (xylology and anthracology) and pollen (palynology). In the present study, archaeobotany is applied on the site of Motya, a small island set in Westerm Sicily, in the middle of the Mediterranean. Although the Phoenician-Punic period (late 8 th century B.C. – 397 B.C.) represents the main occupational phase of the archaeologi...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
Palynological research carried out on two renowned archaeological sites located in central Sicily al...
At the site of Grotta Mora Cavorso (Lazio, Italy), an unusual archaeological find, made of two coars...
The present study concerns the analysis of the plant remains found in the archaeological site of Mot...
The archaeological site of Motya consists of a small island (ca. 40 ha) in western Sicily, between t...
The archaeobotanical analyses carried out at the archaeological site of Motya (Sicily, Italy), a sma...
The site of Motya, also called Mozia or Mothia, is a small islet in the middle of the Mediterranean,...
The current research aims to reconstruct plant cultivation and plant use of the Phoenicians at Motya...
The present study focuses on archaeobotanical analyses performed at the Phoenicians site of Motya, a...
Recently, the Bio-archaeological Laboratory of the CRPR, conscious of the importance of Archaeopalyn...
This paper interprets the first archaeobotanical data to emerge from the island of Ustica (north-wes...
The project ¿Harvesting Memories: Ecology and Archaeology of Monti Sicani landscapes¿ aims to analys...
Plant remains - including pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, seeds and fruits, woods and charcoals - a...
The palynological research has the potential to reconstruct plant landscape, land-use and ethnobotan...
Palynological researches have been carried out in the framework of cooperative projects with local a...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
Palynological research carried out on two renowned archaeological sites located in central Sicily al...
At the site of Grotta Mora Cavorso (Lazio, Italy), an unusual archaeological find, made of two coars...
The present study concerns the analysis of the plant remains found in the archaeological site of Mot...
The archaeological site of Motya consists of a small island (ca. 40 ha) in western Sicily, between t...
The archaeobotanical analyses carried out at the archaeological site of Motya (Sicily, Italy), a sma...
The site of Motya, also called Mozia or Mothia, is a small islet in the middle of the Mediterranean,...
The current research aims to reconstruct plant cultivation and plant use of the Phoenicians at Motya...
The present study focuses on archaeobotanical analyses performed at the Phoenicians site of Motya, a...
Recently, the Bio-archaeological Laboratory of the CRPR, conscious of the importance of Archaeopalyn...
This paper interprets the first archaeobotanical data to emerge from the island of Ustica (north-wes...
The project ¿Harvesting Memories: Ecology and Archaeology of Monti Sicani landscapes¿ aims to analys...
Plant remains - including pollen, non-pollen palynomorphs, seeds and fruits, woods and charcoals - a...
The palynological research has the potential to reconstruct plant landscape, land-use and ethnobotan...
Palynological researches have been carried out in the framework of cooperative projects with local a...
Among the sciences applied in archaeology, archaeobotany fills a crucial piece of the Cultural Herit...
Palynological research carried out on two renowned archaeological sites located in central Sicily al...
At the site of Grotta Mora Cavorso (Lazio, Italy), an unusual archaeological find, made of two coars...