An archaeobotanical and stable isotope approach to changing agricultural practices in the NW Mediterranean region around 4000 BC.
Ferran AntolínStefanie JacometRaül SoterasClaudia GerlingStefano M BernasconiFranziska FollmannIrka HajdasMadalina JaggiAna JesusHéctor Martínez-GrauFrancesc Xavier OmsBrigitte RöderBigna L SteinerSamuel van WilligenPublished in: The Holocene (2023)
It has recently been observed, that a change in the crop spectrum happened during the so-called Middle Neolithic in France at ca. 4000 BC. An agricultural system based on free-threshing cereals (naked wheat and naked barley) seems to shift to one based on glume wheats. This is a major change for traditional farmers and this paper aims to shed light on its possible causes. Here we describe the results of new investigations in a key area for the understanding of this process: the NW Mediterranean arch, where free-threshing cereals are the main cultivars since ca. 5100 BC. New data confirm that the shift towards glume wheats is also observed in some sites of the NE of the Iberian Peninsula and that among the glume wheats that spread at ca. 4000 BC we should not only consider emmer and einkorn but also Timopheevi's wheat. Stable isotope analyses indicate no major decrease in soil fertility or alterations in local precipitation regimes. The agricultural change may be the result of a combination of the spread of damaging pests for free-threshing cereals and presumably new networks being developed with the North-eastern part of Italy and the Balkans.