Çamlıbel Tarlası is a short-lived, mid 4th millennium BCE Chalcolithic archaeological site in northern central Anatolia, modern Turkey, with evidence for both intensive metallurgy and permanent occupation. Analysis of a wood charcoal assemblage from the site, totaling 2815 charcoal fragments, is the first from this period and region. Anthracological analysis indicates that the primary fuel wood used was deciduous oak, which comprised nearly 90% of identifiable fragments. We find little evidence of differences in wood species used for different functions or over time; however, a significant trend towards the increased use of large-diameter branch or trunk wood over time is noted both for oak and other minor taxa. We reconstruct a dense oak-d...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Taxonomic identification on the basis of wood anatomy showed that 68.82\% of wood charcoals from the...
Çadır Höyük, a mounded site on the north central Anatolian plateau occupied almost continuously from...
A considerable amount of charcoal remains from the archaeological site of Arslantepe (Eastern Anatol...
Previous anthracological research on multi-use pit fills at Kaman-Kalehöyük in central Turkey shows ...
The central Anatolian region is characterised by an anthropogenic landscape, a product of millennia ...
In this paper charcoals from the Syrian sites Tell Mozan and Tell Jerablus are investigated to under...
Pinus is viewed as the best, but we have hypothesised that it was probably less available than the o...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
In this paper charcoals from the Syrian sites Tell Mozan and Tell Jerablus are investigated to under...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
This paper deals with the archaeobotanical assemblages of the Late Chalcolithic 3-4 at the site of A...
Asouti, E. 2003. Woodland vegetation and fuel exploitation at the prehistoric campsite of Pınarbaşı,...
This paper presents the results of dendroanthracological analyses conducted on the anthracological a...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Taxonomic identification on the basis of wood anatomy showed that 68.82\% of wood charcoals from the...
Çadır Höyük, a mounded site on the north central Anatolian plateau occupied almost continuously from...
A considerable amount of charcoal remains from the archaeological site of Arslantepe (Eastern Anatol...
Previous anthracological research on multi-use pit fills at Kaman-Kalehöyük in central Turkey shows ...
The central Anatolian region is characterised by an anthropogenic landscape, a product of millennia ...
In this paper charcoals from the Syrian sites Tell Mozan and Tell Jerablus are investigated to under...
Pinus is viewed as the best, but we have hypothesised that it was probably less available than the o...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
In this paper charcoals from the Syrian sites Tell Mozan and Tell Jerablus are investigated to under...
International audienceExcavations conducted at the site of Gegharot in north central Armenia, along ...
This paper deals with the archaeobotanical assemblages of the Late Chalcolithic 3-4 at the site of A...
Asouti, E. 2003. Woodland vegetation and fuel exploitation at the prehistoric campsite of Pınarbaşı,...
This paper presents the results of dendroanthracological analyses conducted on the anthracological a...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Taxonomic identification on the basis of wood anatomy showed that 68.82\% of wood charcoals from the...
Çadır Höyük, a mounded site on the north central Anatolian plateau occupied almost continuously from...