A corn-hoard from Sarup. A contribution to the agriculture of the TRB Culture. During excavation of the Sarup camp in south-west Funen a large, entire funnel beaker (vessel a) was found containing a smaller, also entire, funnel beaker (vessel b). On archaeological evidence the vessels are dated to the transition between Early and Middle Neolithic (EN Period C and MN Period la), also called the Fuchsberg Phase (5). The two vessels contained carbonized plant material. After washing through a sieve with a 0. 9 mm mesh the amount of plant remains from vessel a was 69.37 g and from vessel b 8.19 g, a total of 77.56 g or 224 cc. METHOD Sorting under the microscope showed that most of the plant remains wer...
The Mozgawa site, covering area of ca. 40 ha, is located in the loess area in SE Poland. It belongs ...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the s...
&n...
Seeds of weeds as food in the fore-Roman lron AgeAmong the objects found in 1949 in the ruins of a b...
Agriculture in Jutland during the Single Grave culture, Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age – as rev...
Excavation of part of a Romano-British rural settlement produced charred plant remains from samples ...
EnkehøjA settlement with Bell Beaker pottery and charred grainThree settlements from Late Neolithic ...
Sarup. Neolithic Causewa...
Starch granules are being successfully recovered from an increasing range of artefacts. Here we pres...
The goal of this thesis is to reconstruct the plant component of paleodiet for the Avonlea complex (...
The identification of plant remains from both carbonised material and impressions in pisé indicates ...
Made available with permission from Maney Publishing / Environmental Archaeology. www.maneypublishin...
The Egehøj Cereals - Bread Wheat (Triticum aestivum s. l.) in the Danish Early Bronze Ag
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
The Mozgawa site, covering area of ca. 40 ha, is located in the loess area in SE Poland. It belongs ...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the s...
&n...
Seeds of weeds as food in the fore-Roman lron AgeAmong the objects found in 1949 in the ruins of a b...
Agriculture in Jutland during the Single Grave culture, Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age – as rev...
Excavation of part of a Romano-British rural settlement produced charred plant remains from samples ...
EnkehøjA settlement with Bell Beaker pottery and charred grainThree settlements from Late Neolithic ...
Sarup. Neolithic Causewa...
Starch granules are being successfully recovered from an increasing range of artefacts. Here we pres...
The goal of this thesis is to reconstruct the plant component of paleodiet for the Avonlea complex (...
The identification of plant remains from both carbonised material and impressions in pisé indicates ...
Made available with permission from Maney Publishing / Environmental Archaeology. www.maneypublishin...
The Egehøj Cereals - Bread Wheat (Triticum aestivum s. l.) in the Danish Early Bronze Ag
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
The Mozgawa site, covering area of ca. 40 ha, is located in the loess area in SE Poland. It belongs ...
The discovery of a storeroom full of barley and other cereals (L.9512) in the proto-historic site of...
We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the s...