Our understanding of the introduction and adoption of new plant foods in Roman Britain is currently limited by a lack of data from a group of Late Iron Age settlements commonly referred to as oppida (large pre-Roman towns). This paper presents the first evidence of several imported plant foods from Late Iron Age Britain in the form of waterlogged plant remains from the oppidum at Silchester. These were recovered from the basal contexts of two wells, dated to the early first century A.D. One olive stone and several seeds of celery, coriander and dill were identified. The results are compared to archaeobotanical data from elsewhere in Britain and northwestern Europe, demonstrating that Silchester is part of the wider phenomenon of the adoptio...
In the last ten years, an increasing number of studies concerning seeds and fruits recorded in archa...
Seeds of weeds as food in the fore-Roman lron AgeAmong the objects found in 1949 in the ruins of a b...
Samples of first to fourth century date were analysed representing the phases and zones of the exten...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
The ability to provenance crop remains from archaeological sites remains an outstanding research que...
The introduction and dispersal histories of eight common condiments in North-West Europe are explore...
An extensive range of plant remains was recovered from seven Roman sites in London where waterlogged...
This thesis presents the results of a study of plant remains, principally fruits and seeds, from 10 ...
The analysis of organic residues from pottery sherds using Gas-Chromatography with mass-spectroscopy...
Charred plant remains included charred cereal grains and chaff together with other crop plants, such...
This thesis examines the introduction and importation of numerous exotic food plants into north-west...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
This paper is a review of the seeds/fruits obtained from about one hundred Roman period archaeologic...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
During Roman times plant products were frequently used as offerings in graves. The cremation ritual,...
In the last ten years, an increasing number of studies concerning seeds and fruits recorded in archa...
Seeds of weeds as food in the fore-Roman lron AgeAmong the objects found in 1949 in the ruins of a b...
Samples of first to fourth century date were analysed representing the phases and zones of the exten...
AbstractThe development of oppida in the late first millennium BC across north-western Europe repres...
The ability to provenance crop remains from archaeological sites remains an outstanding research que...
The introduction and dispersal histories of eight common condiments in North-West Europe are explore...
An extensive range of plant remains was recovered from seven Roman sites in London where waterlogged...
This thesis presents the results of a study of plant remains, principally fruits and seeds, from 10 ...
The analysis of organic residues from pottery sherds using Gas-Chromatography with mass-spectroscopy...
Charred plant remains included charred cereal grains and chaff together with other crop plants, such...
This thesis examines the introduction and importation of numerous exotic food plants into north-west...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
This paper is a review of the seeds/fruits obtained from about one hundred Roman period archaeologic...
Using archaeobotanical data and examining them with a novel combination of density interpolation sur...
During Roman times plant products were frequently used as offerings in graves. The cremation ritual,...
In the last ten years, an increasing number of studies concerning seeds and fruits recorded in archa...
Seeds of weeds as food in the fore-Roman lron AgeAmong the objects found in 1949 in the ruins of a b...
Samples of first to fourth century date were analysed representing the phases and zones of the exten...