‘New glume wheat’ (NGW) is an archaeobotanical type increasingly recognised at Neolithic–Bronze Age sites across Europe and Western Asia. NGW has been recognised via aDNA and morphological analyses of chaff remains as a member of the Triticum timopheevii wheat group, recent cultivation of which is known only from western Georgia. This study combines geometric morphometric (GMM) analysis of NGW grains with updated results from a parallel study of chaff dehiscence, to assess the taxonomic classification and domestication status of NGW from the Neolithic East Mound at Çatalhöyük (central Anatolia). Results confirm close comparability of NGW with modern wheats from the group T. timopheevii, in a...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
International audienceSince its Neolithic domestication in the Fertile Crescent, barley has spread t...
Bere is a landrace of barley, adapted to the marginal conditions of northern Scotland, especially th...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
Studies of the origins of agriculture in the Near East have revealed that the eight plant species kn...
Wheat and barley are two of the founder crops domesticated in the Fertile Crescent, and currently re...
We used polymerase chain reactions specific for the wheat B and G genomes with nine accessions of th...
International audienceFollowing its domestication in the Fertile Crescent, barley spreads into the w...
International audienceGeometric morphometrics is a powerful method to explore intraspecies variation...
International audienceBere is a landrace of barley, adapted to the marginal conditions of northern S...
Cereal grains recovered from recent excavations at two early Neolithic tenth millennium (BP non cal....
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The morphology of ancient cereal grains in Central Asia has been heavily discussed as an indicator o...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
International audienceSince its Neolithic domestication in the Fertile Crescent, barley has spread t...
Bere is a landrace of barley, adapted to the marginal conditions of northern Scotland, especially th...
International audienceThe application of morphometric analysis in archaeobotany has the potential to...
Studies of the origins of agriculture in the Near East have revealed that the eight plant species kn...
Wheat and barley are two of the founder crops domesticated in the Fertile Crescent, and currently re...
We used polymerase chain reactions specific for the wheat B and G genomes with nine accessions of th...
International audienceFollowing its domestication in the Fertile Crescent, barley spreads into the w...
International audienceGeometric morphometrics is a powerful method to explore intraspecies variation...
International audienceBere is a landrace of barley, adapted to the marginal conditions of northern S...
Cereal grains recovered from recent excavations at two early Neolithic tenth millennium (BP non cal....
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The morphology of ancient cereal grains in Central Asia has been heavily discussed as an indicator o...
Increase in grain/seed size recurrently features as a key element in the 'domestication syndrom...
International audienceSince its Neolithic domestication in the Fertile Crescent, barley has spread t...
Bere is a landrace of barley, adapted to the marginal conditions of northern Scotland, especially th...