This paper updates the question of plant resources during the Bronze Age and First Iron Age in the Northwestern Mediterranean Basin. Among the cereals, six-row hulled barley is dominant throughout the territory whereas naked and hulled wheats take on greater or lesser roles from region to region. Millet cultivation developed during the Bronze Age and became widespread in the First Iron Age. Apart from cereals, pulses, oil species and fruit appear to be secondary. Results from the study of archaeobotanical remains on wetland sites, however, leads us to question this finding, as oil plants and fruit are much better represented in waterlogged conditions. The cultivation of vine began in the First Iron Age. In spite of a number of characteristi...
International audienceFor several decades, a growing number of protohistoric sites in Auvergne (Mass...
Abstract: The results of the archaeobotanical examination of 2 sites, namely Mezraa Hyk and Gre Viri...
Major social and economical changes occurred in human societies during the Iron Age of Southeastern ...
This paper updates the question of plant resources during the Bronze Age and First Iron Age in the N...
International audienceDuring the late Bronze age, settlements in Languedoc, southern France, were lo...
International audienceNew plant macrofossil studies in northwestern France enable a better insight i...
International audienceAlong with ceramics production, sedentism, and herding, agriculture is a major...
Based on carpological studies and pollen analyses of six sites, apicture is sketched in this article...
Information concerning plant resources of Late Bronze Age communities in Languedoc was, until now, r...
International audienceOasian agrobiodiversity in Northwestern Arabia has a long and deep history whi...
This thesis examines macrobotanical remains recovered from Early Bronze Age and Iron Age (approximat...
The Shephelah, known as the breadbasket of the southern Levant, is one of the more extensively inves...
This paper presents new archaeobotanical data from six sites in Sardinia, Italy, dated to the Bronze...
The study explores the operation sequences of the production, processing, and storage of cereal crop...
International audienceFor several decades, a growing number of protohistoric sites in Auvergne (Mass...
Abstract: The results of the archaeobotanical examination of 2 sites, namely Mezraa Hyk and Gre Viri...
Major social and economical changes occurred in human societies during the Iron Age of Southeastern ...
This paper updates the question of plant resources during the Bronze Age and First Iron Age in the N...
International audienceDuring the late Bronze age, settlements in Languedoc, southern France, were lo...
International audienceNew plant macrofossil studies in northwestern France enable a better insight i...
International audienceAlong with ceramics production, sedentism, and herding, agriculture is a major...
Based on carpological studies and pollen analyses of six sites, apicture is sketched in this article...
Information concerning plant resources of Late Bronze Age communities in Languedoc was, until now, r...
International audienceOasian agrobiodiversity in Northwestern Arabia has a long and deep history whi...
This thesis examines macrobotanical remains recovered from Early Bronze Age and Iron Age (approximat...
The Shephelah, known as the breadbasket of the southern Levant, is one of the more extensively inves...
This paper presents new archaeobotanical data from six sites in Sardinia, Italy, dated to the Bronze...
The study explores the operation sequences of the production, processing, and storage of cereal crop...
International audienceFor several decades, a growing number of protohistoric sites in Auvergne (Mass...
Abstract: The results of the archaeobotanical examination of 2 sites, namely Mezraa Hyk and Gre Viri...
Major social and economical changes occurred in human societies during the Iron Age of Southeastern ...