Isotope and morphometrical evidence reveals the technological package associated with agriculture adoption in western Europe.
José L ArausMireia GascónEva Ros-SabéRaquel Piqué HuertaFatima Z RezzoukMònica AguileraJordi VoltasLeonor Peña-ChocarroGuillem Pérez-JordàXavier TerradasAntoni PalomoJuan Pedro FerrioFerran AntolínPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
This study aimed to reconstruct the environmental conditions and the crop management practices and plant characteristics when agriculture appeared in western Europe. We analyzed oak charcoal and a large number of cereal caryopsides recovered from La Draga (Girona, Spain), an early (5300 to 4800 cal. BC) agricultural site from the Iberian Peninsula. The carbon isotope discrimination (Δ 13 C) values of oak, the dominant forest species in the region, indicates prevalence of a wet climate at the site. Further, we reconstructed crop management conditions, achievable yield, and crop characteristics through the analysis of Δ 13 C, nitrogen isotope composition (δ 15 N), nitrogen content, and the reconstructed weight of wheat and barley caryopsides, following protocols developed by our team [Araus et al. , Nat. Commun. 5 , 3953 (2014)] and comparison of these parameters with present-day organic agriculture in the region. In parallel, a regional perspective was achieved through the study of wheat and barley grains of seventeen Neolithic sites from the western Mediterranean. The results suggest that rather than small-garden cultivation, a more extensive agriculture was practiced under good water availability and moderate manuring. Moreover, results from La Draga evidence that grain weight and spike morphology were comparable to contemporary cereals. Growing conditions and the prevalence of improved crop traits indicate that agriculture was fairly consolidated at the time it reached the western edge of Europe.