Pit clusters have not received systematic attention from archaeologists working in Anatolia and the Near East, in contrast to many other parts of the world. This paper presents a case study of Middle Chalcolithic pits from the prehistoric site of Barcın Höyük in northwestern Anatolia to show how pit clusters, interpreted as underground grain silos, can inform us about ancient food economies, social organization, and inhabited landscapes. It is argued that the silos at Barcın Höyük were used by small family-sized groups to store surplus grain. Dated to the first quarter of the 5th millennium b.c., the silos present evidence for agricultural productivity during a period that has largely eluded archaeological investigation in western Anatolia
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
Landscape archaeological research has been undertaken on the mound of Barcin Höyük in northwest Anat...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
Pit clusters have not received systematic attention from archaeologists working in Anatolia and the ...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Evidence for the presence of storage pits described in Hittite texts by the Sumerogram "ÉSAG" is pre...
This project aims to assess how agricultural production was adapted to the changing social and econo...
In the prehistoric and historical archaeology of Western Europe there are plenty of examples of unde...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
The Chalcolithic period of the southern Levant spans from c. 5800 - 3600 cal BC. Traditional hallma...
The Chalcolithic period of the southern Levant spans from c. 5800 - 3600 cal BC. Traditional hallma...
Çadır Höyük, a mounded site on the north central Anatolian plateau occupied almost continuously from...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
This article presents the earliest, V millennium BCE, occupation at the site of Arslante- pe. The ex...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
Landscape archaeological research has been undertaken on the mound of Barcin Höyük in northwest Anat...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
Pit clusters have not received systematic attention from archaeologists working in Anatolia and the ...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Limited knowledge about the 3000-year period between the Neolithic and the Bronze Age in central Ana...
Evidence for the presence of storage pits described in Hittite texts by the Sumerogram "ÉSAG" is pre...
This project aims to assess how agricultural production was adapted to the changing social and econo...
In the prehistoric and historical archaeology of Western Europe there are plenty of examples of unde...
This paper explores the explanations for, and consequences of, the early appearance of food producti...
The Chalcolithic period of the southern Levant spans from c. 5800 - 3600 cal BC. Traditional hallma...
The Chalcolithic period of the southern Levant spans from c. 5800 - 3600 cal BC. Traditional hallma...
Çadır Höyük, a mounded site on the north central Anatolian plateau occupied almost continuously from...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
This article presents the earliest, V millennium BCE, occupation at the site of Arslante- pe. The ex...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...
Landscape archaeological research has been undertaken on the mound of Barcin Höyük in northwest Anat...
The Middle and Late Bronze Ages of western Anatolia (modern Turkey) remains poorly understood in com...