An Archaeobotanical Perspective on Environment, Plant Use, Agriculture, and Interregional Contact in South and Western Iran

Plant remains from archaeological sites reflect many aspects of the relationship between people, plants, and the environmentin which they lived. Plant macroremains—seeds and wood that are visible without a microscope—can address a widerange of questions. The most basic include what crops were grown?...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Naomi Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Archaeological Sciences Research Centre, University of Sistan and Baluchestan 2011-04-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Archaeological Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijas.usb.ac.ir/article_460_66a32d7eb744b4d1090a4c17e4697b42.pdf
Description
Summary:Plant remains from archaeological sites reflect many aspects of the relationship between people, plants, and the environmentin which they lived. Plant macroremains—seeds and wood that are visible without a microscope—can address a widerange of questions. The most basic include what crops were grown? What was used for fuel? Do any of the plants comefrom distant lands? Examples from fourth and third millennium deposits at Farukhabad, Sharafabad, Godin, and Malyanshow that within the basic agricultural assemblage of wheat and barley shared by all sites, Sharafabad and Godin havestronger evidence of irrigation, lentil and flax, and Farukhabad appears to be more oriented toward pastoral productionthan the other sites. This article provides an introduction to archaeobotany using examples drawn from several fourth andthird millennium sites in southern and western Iran. Human impact on the vegetation in Khuzestan and Fars appears tohave been minimal at this time. A few unexpected finds (a date pit from cold-country/Sardsir Malyan suggests trade andrice at Parthian Susa may be evidence of a new crop that had long been cultivated in the Indus valley.
ISSN:2251-743X
2676-2919