Cargando…

Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France

Farming economy was first introduced to the coastal areas of Southern France by Impressa groups (ca. 5850–5650 cal BC), originating from Italy, and subsequently spread to the hinterland by Cardial/Epicardial communities (ca. 5400–4500 cal BC). Fruit and seed remains preserved in archaeological sites...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bouby, Laurent, Marinval, Philippe, Durand, Frédérique, Figueiral, Isabel, Briois, François, Martzluff, Michel, Perrin, Thomas, Valdeyron, Nicolas, Vaquer, Jean, Guilaine, Jean, Manen, Claire
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7117749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32240184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230731
_version_ 1783514437136678912
author Bouby, Laurent
Marinval, Philippe
Durand, Frédérique
Figueiral, Isabel
Briois, François
Martzluff, Michel
Perrin, Thomas
Valdeyron, Nicolas
Vaquer, Jean
Guilaine, Jean
Manen, Claire
author_facet Bouby, Laurent
Marinval, Philippe
Durand, Frédérique
Figueiral, Isabel
Briois, François
Martzluff, Michel
Perrin, Thomas
Valdeyron, Nicolas
Vaquer, Jean
Guilaine, Jean
Manen, Claire
author_sort Bouby, Laurent
collection PubMed
description Farming economy was first introduced to the coastal areas of Southern France by Impressa groups (ca. 5850–5650 cal BC), originating from Italy, and subsequently spread to the hinterland by Cardial/Epicardial communities (ca. 5400–4500 cal BC). Fruit and seed remains preserved in archaeological sites provide direct evidence of the botanical resources cultivated and collected by these ancient social groups. But the transition from hunter-gathering to agricultural subsistence strategies is still poorly known in the area, due to insufficient and sometimes outdated archaeobotanical studies. Here we present new results and a critical review of all the available archaeobotanical data, in order to characterize food plant resources, cultivation practices and their variations in time and space. The archaeological dataset is composed of 19 sites (20 site/phases) mostly located in the Mediterranean lowlands. Our results demonstrate that farming economy of the Impressa groups was focused on the cultivation of hulled wheats, with only slight differences compared to their South Italian origins. The contribution of naked cereals increased in the Cardial/Epicardial agriculture, in agreement with the situation in other areas of the Western Mediterranean. The subsistence economy of hinterland sites seems to include a wider contribution of wild fruits and more limited contribution of crops. However, the poor evidence of cultivation activities in the hinterland is likely due first to the difficulties to find and excavate the sites and perform large-scale archaeobotanical sampling. It is likely that agriculture played a significant but variable role between sites and territories.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7117749
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71177492020-04-09 Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France Bouby, Laurent Marinval, Philippe Durand, Frédérique Figueiral, Isabel Briois, François Martzluff, Michel Perrin, Thomas Valdeyron, Nicolas Vaquer, Jean Guilaine, Jean Manen, Claire PLoS One Research Article Farming economy was first introduced to the coastal areas of Southern France by Impressa groups (ca. 5850–5650 cal BC), originating from Italy, and subsequently spread to the hinterland by Cardial/Epicardial communities (ca. 5400–4500 cal BC). Fruit and seed remains preserved in archaeological sites provide direct evidence of the botanical resources cultivated and collected by these ancient social groups. But the transition from hunter-gathering to agricultural subsistence strategies is still poorly known in the area, due to insufficient and sometimes outdated archaeobotanical studies. Here we present new results and a critical review of all the available archaeobotanical data, in order to characterize food plant resources, cultivation practices and their variations in time and space. The archaeological dataset is composed of 19 sites (20 site/phases) mostly located in the Mediterranean lowlands. Our results demonstrate that farming economy of the Impressa groups was focused on the cultivation of hulled wheats, with only slight differences compared to their South Italian origins. The contribution of naked cereals increased in the Cardial/Epicardial agriculture, in agreement with the situation in other areas of the Western Mediterranean. The subsistence economy of hinterland sites seems to include a wider contribution of wild fruits and more limited contribution of crops. However, the poor evidence of cultivation activities in the hinterland is likely due first to the difficulties to find and excavate the sites and perform large-scale archaeobotanical sampling. It is likely that agriculture played a significant but variable role between sites and territories. Public Library of Science 2020-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7117749/ /pubmed/32240184 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230731 Text en © 2020 Bouby et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bouby, Laurent
Marinval, Philippe
Durand, Frédérique
Figueiral, Isabel
Briois, François
Martzluff, Michel
Perrin, Thomas
Valdeyron, Nicolas
Vaquer, Jean
Guilaine, Jean
Manen, Claire
Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title_full Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title_fullStr Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title_full_unstemmed Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title_short Early Neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal BC) agricultural diffusion in the Western Mediterranean: An update of archaeobotanical data in SW France
title_sort early neolithic (ca. 5850-4500 cal bc) agricultural diffusion in the western mediterranean: an update of archaeobotanical data in sw france
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7117749/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32240184
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230731
work_keys_str_mv AT boubylaurent earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT marinvalphilippe earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT durandfrederique earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT figueiralisabel earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT brioisfrancois earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT martzluffmichel earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT perrinthomas earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT valdeyronnicolas earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT vaquerjean earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT guilainejean earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance
AT manenclaire earlyneolithicca58504500calbcagriculturaldiffusioninthewesternmediterraneananupdateofarchaeobotanicaldatainswfrance