2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-03552-w
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Phytolith evidence for the pastoral origins of multi-cropping in Mesopotamia (ancient Iraq)

Abstract: Multi-cropping was vital for provisioning large population centers across ancient Eurasia. In Southwest Asia, multi-cropping, in which grain, fodder, or forage could be reliably cultivated during dry summer months, only became possible with the translocation of summer grains, like millet, from Africa and East Asia. Despite some textual sources suggesting millet cultivation as early as the third millennium BCE, the absence of robust archaeobotanical evidence for millet in semi-arid Mesopotamia (ancient Iraq) ha… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Modern plants used for comparison for this study were processed following D’Agostini et al ( 65 ). Morphometric analyses were not performed as the silica skeletons featured a very high degree of breakage, hence limiting the measurement of relevant features ( 66 68 ). Furthermore, the number of cells was mostly insufficient according to relevant literature ( 69 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Modern plants used for comparison for this study were processed following D’Agostini et al ( 65 ). Morphometric analyses were not performed as the silica skeletons featured a very high degree of breakage, hence limiting the measurement of relevant features ( 66 68 ). Furthermore, the number of cells was mostly insufficient according to relevant literature ( 69 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here we show that phytoliths can be removed from the silica cycle by aggregation of particles in soils and sediments, a process that can generate two pools: fresh, labile versus aged, entrapped phytoliths (Li et al, 2020b;Meunier et al, 2014;Vander Linden et al, 2021). Aggregation can thus be one of the processes that preserves phytoliths by entrapping them in soils and sediments, enabling their use as paleo-indicators (Cabanes et al, 2012;Cabanes et al, 2015;Laugier et al, 2022).…”
Section: Implications and Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Not surprisingly, the irrigation-based societies of Bronze Age Mesopotamia also rely primarily on Southwest Asian domesticates, again emmer wheat and barley. Here too, the North China domesticate broomcorn millet has been recorded, on the basis of phytolith evidence, from the mid-second millennium BC site of Khani Masi in Northern Iraq (Laugier et al, 2022).…”
Section: Bronze Age Crop Mixtures Across the Old Worldmentioning
confidence: 99%