Plant use from c. 9000-7800 cal BC at Pınarbaşı A and D, Karaman Province, Central Anatolia

No Thumbnail Available
Date
2014-01-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Plant macrofossil analysis, phytolith analysis and AMS radiocarbon dating at Pınarbaşı in central Anatolia confirm the presence and continuity of plant gathering practice as a key subsistence strategy from c. 9000–7700 cal BC. Results demonstrate the use of almond, terebinth and hackberry as food plants, similar to Palaeolithic/Epipalaeolithic subsistence strategies in the Antalya region. Crop and/or crop progenitor use is unsupported, with sporadic cereal macrofossils rare and shown by direct radiocarbon dating to be intrusive, a conclusion supported by the phytolith analysis. Seed exploitation is also rejected. Results confirm the presence of sedentary foragers from 9000 cal BC in central Anatolia, contemporary with the Levantine PPNA-Early PPNB, suggest a different plant subsistence focus to contemporary forager societies in the Fertile Crescent and indicate economic differences with contemporary sites in central Anatolia which were already cultivating crops. © 2013, Elsevier Ltd.
Description
Keywords
Turkey, Isotope dating, Seeds, Forage, Plants, Archaeological sites
Citation
Fairbairn, A. S., Jenkins, E., Baird, D., & Jacobsen, G. (2014). Plant use from c. 9000-7800 cal BC at Pınarbaşı A and D, Karaman Province, central Anatolia. Journal of Archaeological Science, 41, 801-812. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2013.09.024
Collections