Disentangling Human–Plant–Animal Dynamics at the Microscale: Geo-Ethnoarchaeological Case Studies from North Africa and the Near East
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methodological Framework
3. Case Studies and Archaeological Significance: Brief Overview, Main Highlights, and Future Research Directions
3.1. The Foothills of the Zagros Mountains, Iraqi Kurdistan
3.2. The Konya Plain in Central Anatolia, Turkey
3.3. The Northern and Southern Levant
3.4. The High Tell in Tunisia, Eastern Maghreb
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Method | Abilities, Advantages, and Appropriate Application | Inabilities and Disadvantages |
---|---|---|
Contextual thin-section micromorphology | Allows examination of microfossils and other microscopic remains in situ and establishes their associations (e.g., herbivore vs. omnivore dung); preserves the original size of multicelled phytoliths; supports diet reconstruction; may be extrapolated to reconstruct local landscape, environmental conditions, and land use. Identifies the specific depositional context (e.g., microlaminated structure, trampling within an enclosure); helps understand site formation, depositional pathways, and taphonomic processes (e.g., bioturbation, dissolution, burning). | Associations may be diet-based (e.g., phytoliths scarce or absent in grass-poor diets) and diagenesis-based (e.g., spherulites absent due to dissolution); microlamination may be absent in grass-poor diets and obliterated due to bioturbation. Accurate identification of microfossils is hindered by the thickness of the thin section, sample size (e.g., not enough recognisable phytoliths for proper morphological analysis), 2D views, and they may be masked by other embedded material. Time-consuming thin-section preparation. |
Dung spherulite analyses | Determines amount of spherulites per gram of material/sediment. They serve as a direct indicator to identify dung. Quick method that can be used in the field through smear microscope slides of suspected dung remains. | Absence may be due to dissolution, calcination, and increased heating (burning) particularly under oxidising conditions. They cannot be used solely to identify livestock dung, as they may be produced by wild animals and humans. |
Phytolith analyses | Establishes amount of phytoliths per gram of material/sediment. They are resistant to a variety of soil pH conditions, burial environments, and increased heating (burning). Allows identification of different plant/part types and animal diet. May contribute to reconstructing animal ecology, environment, seasonality, as well as foddering and grazing activity and land use. Allows 3D microscopic examination, making their identification easier. | They cannot be related to dung by themselves, as they may derive from both dung and non-dung sources. Over-representation of grass relative amounts (due to differential phytolith production) and selection of feed by humans and animals may affect environmental reconstruction. Time-consuming chemical extraction that may disaggregate multicelled phytoliths and remove associated material that may help with interpretation. |
Wood ash pseudomorph analyses | Establishes amount of wood ash pseudomorphs per gram of ashed material/sediment. Their abundances may indicate a diet that is either based or includes a component of dicotyledonous matter. As these are common in wood ash, ratios ash pseudomorphs/dung spherulites may allow distinction between wood and dung fuel remains or mixtures of both. Rapid method that can be used in the field. | They do not have a clear taxonomic value and may be absent in grass-poor dietary regimes. Similarly to other plant remains (e.g., phytoliths), they cannot be related to dung or dung-derived material by themselves. Their absence may also be due to dissolution or calcination. |
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Portillo, M.; García-Suárez, A. Disentangling Human–Plant–Animal Dynamics at the Microscale: Geo-Ethnoarchaeological Case Studies from North Africa and the Near East. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 8143. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11178143
Portillo M, García-Suárez A. Disentangling Human–Plant–Animal Dynamics at the Microscale: Geo-Ethnoarchaeological Case Studies from North Africa and the Near East. Applied Sciences. 2021; 11(17):8143. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11178143
Chicago/Turabian StylePortillo, Marta, and Aroa García-Suárez. 2021. "Disentangling Human–Plant–Animal Dynamics at the Microscale: Geo-Ethnoarchaeological Case Studies from North Africa and the Near East" Applied Sciences 11, no. 17: 8143. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11178143
APA StylePortillo, M., & García-Suárez, A. (2021). Disentangling Human–Plant–Animal Dynamics at the Microscale: Geo-Ethnoarchaeological Case Studies from North Africa and the Near East. Applied Sciences, 11(17), 8143. https://doi.org/10.3390/app11178143