For the first time we integrate quantitative data on lithic sickles and archaeobotanical evidence for domestication and the evolution of plant economies from sites dated to the terminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene (ca. 12000–5000 cal. BCE) from throughout the Fertile Crescent region of Southwest Asia. We find a strong correlation in some regions, throughout the Levant, for increasing investment in sickles that tracks the evidence for increasing reliance on cereal crops, while evidence for morphological domestication in wheats (Triticum monococcum and Triticum dicoccum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) was delayed in comparison to sickle use. These data indicate that while the co-increase of sickle blades and cereal crops support the protract...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
Domestic cereals, wheat and barley, appeared at several distant sites in the Near East from wild pro...
© 2016 The Authors. For the first time we integrate quantitative data on lithic sickles and archaeob...
AbstractFor the first time we integrate quantitative data on lithic sickles and archaeobotanical evi...
Archaeobotanical and genetic analysis of modern plant materials are drawing a complex scenario for t...
International audienceThe origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological re...
The origins of agriculture, 10 000 years ago, led to profound changes in the biology of plants explo...
Domestication is the process by which plants or animals evolved to fit a human-managed environment, ...
International audienceArchaeobotanical and genetic analysis of modern plant materials are drawing a ...
The origins of agriculture involved pathways of domestication in which human behaviours and plant ge...
When and where cereal cultivation and domestication took place in the Near East are still matters of...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
Domestic cereals, wheat and barley, appeared at several distant sites in the Near East from wild pro...
© 2016 The Authors. For the first time we integrate quantitative data on lithic sickles and archaeob...
AbstractFor the first time we integrate quantitative data on lithic sickles and archaeobotanical evi...
Archaeobotanical and genetic analysis of modern plant materials are drawing a complex scenario for t...
International audienceThe origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological re...
The origins of agriculture, 10 000 years ago, led to profound changes in the biology of plants explo...
Domestication is the process by which plants or animals evolved to fit a human-managed environment, ...
International audienceArchaeobotanical and genetic analysis of modern plant materials are drawing a ...
The origins of agriculture involved pathways of domestication in which human behaviours and plant ge...
When and where cereal cultivation and domestication took place in the Near East are still matters of...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
Domestic cereals, wheat and barley, appeared at several distant sites in the Near East from wild pro...