globalchange  > 过去全球变化的重建
DOI: 10.1177/0959683619826654
WOS记录号: WOS:000468293200013
论文题名:
The origin and spread of olive cultivation in the Mediterranean Basin: The fossil pollen evidence
作者: Langgut, Dafna1,2; Cheddadi, Rachid3; Sebastian Carrion, Jose4; Cavanagh, Mark1,2; Colombaroli, Daniele5,6; Eastwood, Warren John7; Greenberg, Raphael8; Litt, Thomas9; Mercuri, Anna Maria10; Miebach, Andrea9; Roberts, C. Neil11; Woldring, Henk12; Woodbridgel, Jessie11
通讯作者: Langgut, Dafna
刊名: HOLOCENE
ISSN: 0959-6836
EISSN: 1477-0911
出版年: 2019
卷: 29, 期:5, 页码:902-922
语种: 英语
英文关键词: Chalcolithic ; horticulture ; large-scale olive management ; Neolithic ; Olea europaea ; oleaster ; olive cultivation ; palynology
WOS关键词: OLEA-EUROPAEA L. ; EARLY BRONZE-AGE ; HOLOCENE VEGETATION HISTORY ; GESHER BENOT YAAQOV ; LAGO-DELLACCESA TUSCANY ; LAST GLACIAL PERIOD ; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE ; SOUTHERN LEVANT ; CLIMATIC-CHANGE ; OHALO-II
WOS学科分类: Geography, Physical ; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WOS研究方向: Physical Geography ; Geology
英文摘要:

Olive (Olea europaea L.) was one of the most important fruit trees in the ancient Mediterranean region and a founder species of horticulture in the Mediterranean Basin. Different views have been expressed regarding the geographical origins and timing of olive cultivation. Since genetic studies and macro-botanical remains point in different directions, we turn to another proxy - the palynological evidence. This study uses pollen records to shed new light on the history of olive cultivation and large-scale olive management. We employ a fossil pollen dataset composed of high-resolution pollen records obtained across the Mediterranean Basin covering most of the Holocene. Human activity is indicated when Olea pollen percentages rise fairly suddenly, are not accompanied by an increase of other Mediterranean sclerophyllous trees, and when the rise occurs in combination with consistent archaeological and archaeobotanical evidence. Based on these criteria, our results show that the southern Levant served as the locus of primary olive cultivation as early as similar to 6500 years BP (yBP), and that a later, early/mid 6th millennium BP cultivation process occurred in the Aegean (Crete) - whether as an independent large-scale management event or as a result of knowledge and/or seedling transfer from the southern Levant. Thus, the early management of olive trees corresponds to the establishment of the Mediterranean village economy and the completion of the 'secondary products revolution', rather than urbanization or state formation. From these two areas of origin, the southern Levant and the Aegean olive cultivation spread across the Mediterranean, with the beginning of olive horticulture in the northern Levant dated to similar to 4800 yBP. In Anatolia, large-scale olive horticulture was palynologically recorded by similar to 3200 yBP, in mainland Italy at similar to 3400 yBP, and in the Iberian Peninsula at mid/late 3rd millennium BP.


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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/137594
Appears in Collections:过去全球变化的重建

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作者单位: 1.Tel Aviv Univ, Inst Archaeol, POB 39040, IL-6997801 Tel Aviv, Israel
2.Tel Aviv Univ, Steinhardt Museum Nat Hist, POB 39040, IL-6997801 Tel Aviv, Israel
3.Univ Montpellier, Inst Sci Evolut Montpellier, CNRS UM IRD, Montpellier, France
4.Univ Murcia, Fac Biol, Dept Biol Vegetal, Murcia, Spain
5.RHUL, Dept Geog, CQR, London, England
6.Univ Bern, Inst Plant Sci, Paleoecol, Bern, Switzerland
7.Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England
8.Tel Aviv Univ, Dept Archaeol & Ancient Near East Cultures, Tel Aviv, Israel
9.Univ Bonn, Steinmann Inst Geol Mineral & Palaeontol, Bonn, Germany
10.Univ Modena & Reggio Emilia, Lab Palinol & Paleobot, Dipartimento Sci Vita, Modena, Italy
11.Univ Plymouth, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Plymouth, Devon, England
12.Univ Groningen, Groningen Inst Archaeol, Groningen, Netherlands

Recommended Citation:
Langgut, Dafna,Cheddadi, Rachid,Sebastian Carrion, Jose,et al. The origin and spread of olive cultivation in the Mediterranean Basin: The fossil pollen evidence[J]. HOLOCENE,2019-01-01,29(5):902-922
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