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Bulgaria --- palaeobotany
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Plant diversity. --- Ethnobotany. --- Human-plant relationships. --- Man and plants --- Man-plant relationships --- Plant-human relationships --- Plant-man relationships --- Plants and man --- Relationships, Human-plant --- Human beings --- Plants --- Botany, Economic --- Ethnobotany --- Synanthropic plants --- Indigenous peoples --- Ethnobiology --- Human-plant relationships --- Botanical diversity --- Diversity, Plant --- Floristic diversity --- Plant biodiversity --- Plant biological diversity --- Biodiversity
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Agriculture and it origins have long been lively and innovative subjects ot research, involving people working in a variety of disciplines ; indeed the complexity of agricultural processes and their organisation withinparticular communities and societies requires a broad analytical scale on which to investigate them. This volume is the outcome of a collaborative research programme combining archeologists, archaeobatanists, ethnographers, historians and agronomist, aimed at establishing new common ground for integrating different approaches, viewing agriculture from the standpoint of the human actors involved. Each article provides a synthrtic, interdisciplinary overview of various aspects of the relationship between people and plants across wide ranging and diverse spatial and temporal milieux, including such considerations as crop diversity througt time, the use of wild foodstuffs, social context, status and choices of food plants. This is the first of three volumes in the EARTH series on the developmental history of agriculture. -- Quatrième de couverture
Plant diversity. --- Ethnobotany. --- Human-plant relationships. --- Man and plants --- Man-plant relationships --- Plant-human relationships --- Plant-man relationships --- Plants and man --- Relationships, Human-plant --- Human beings --- Plants --- Botany, Economic --- Ethnobotany --- Synanthropic plants --- Indigenous peoples --- Ethnobiology --- Human-plant relationships --- Botanical diversity --- Diversity, Plant --- Floristic diversity --- Plant biodiversity --- Plant biological diversity --- Biodiversity --- Relations homme-plante --- Geschichte --- Landwirtschaft --- Ethnologie --- Biodiversität --- Archäobotanik --- Plant diversity --- Diversité végétale --- Ethnobotanique --- Diversité végétale. --- Ethnobotanique. --- Relations homme-plante. --- Diversité végétale.
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This thesis investigated human impact on the environment at a local scale from the onset of the Neolithic (6100 BC) until the end of the Middle Ages (1400 AD) near the Jantra catchment in northern Bulgaria. It is generally accepted that humans have altered the environment since the Palaeolithic and the Mesolithic to improve hunting and gathering, but it is not clear since when humans had a significant impact on the landscape. Several studies have been investigating human impact on the vegetation, but different estimations of human impact occur among different authors. Furthermore, existing studies are often done at a global scale which restricts detailed human impact assessment and geomorphic modelling. Holocene erosion and sedimentation patterns are studied in several regions including western Europe and the Mediterranean, but these patterns are unknown in the Balkan region, despite the importance of the region in the spread of agriculture from the Levant to the rest of Europe.The assessment of human impact in this thesis was done by simulating and mapping land cover requirements for different scenarios. The land cover requirements were modelled based on existing archaeological research and reports, food requirements and population numbers. Next, the optimal location for arable land, pasture and forest was simulated. Erosion and sedimentation were calculated using a geomorphic model. Eventually, the results were compared with field-based results from another MSc student who worked in the same area. Results show that pasture and arable land demands in the region were low from the Neolithic until the Iron Age, but increased sharply at the onset of the La Tène period and kept on increasing until the Medieval period. The same trend is visible regarding erosion and sedimentation. At the start of the La Tène period, soil erosion rates sharply increased. However, at the end of the Iron Age, on average 10 to 30 cm, of the top soil was removed depending on the scenario...
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Textiles matter - the Neolithic revolution would not have taken place without them. Many of the common utensils used in prehistoric agricultural settlements were textile products. They were indispensable to carry out everyday tasks in the context of a sedentary lifestyle. From 2019 to 2021, the THEFBO project funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) focused on "Textile craftsmanship in the prehistoric wetland settlements on Lake Constance and in Upper Swabia - requirements for textiles and their perception". Volume II of the THEFBO publications contains the proceedings of a conference held online from 24th-26th february 2021. It deals with (mainly technical) textiles and raw materials from a dendrological, paleobotanical, textile-archaeological and cultural-historical perspective and gives insights into the wide range of textiles in prehistory. The broad spectrum ranges from Mesolithic tree bast strings and bags from Early Neolithic wells to textile tools and imprints on clay sealings from Bronze Age Greece and objects made of plant fibres and wool from ice patches in the Alps.
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