Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42462
Title: The introduction of South-Western Asian domesticated plants in North-Western Africa: An archaeobotanical contribution from Neolithic Morocco
Authors: Morales, Jacob 
Pérez Jordà, Guillem
Peña-Chocarro, Leonor
Bokbot, Youssef
Vera, Juan C.
Martínez Sánchez, Rafael M.
Linstädter, Jörg
UNESCO Clasification: 550501 Arqueología
2417 Biología vegetal (botánica)
Keywords: Crops
Early farming
Macro-botanical remains
Neolithic
North Africa, et al
Issue Date: 2016
Journal: Quaternary International 
Conference: 20th Annual Meeting of the European-Association-of-Archaeologists (EAA) 
Abstract: This paper focuses on the new macro-botanical evidence of South-Western Asian cultivated plants from northern Moroccan Neolithic sites. Due to the reduced presence of plant remains from previous excavations in the region, archaeological evidence of agriculture is rare and the arrival of domesticated plants and the role of farming in the Early Neolithic of North Africa are still poorly understood. Here we present results of the analysis carried out in three sites recently excavated: Kaf Taht el-Ghar, Khil, and Ifri Oudadane. Charred seeds of domesticated cereals (Triticum dicoccum, Triticum monococcum/dicoccum, Triticum durum, Triticum aestivum/durum, Hordeum vulgare, Hordeum vulgare var. nudum) and pulses (Lens culinaris, Pisum sativum, Vicia faba) have been recorded in all sites analyzed. Radiocarbon dating of crop seeds indicates that farming, along animal herding and pottery, was most probably introduced in the region at the interval between 5500 and 5000 cal. BC. Absence of evidence for Neolithic farming in other regions of North-Western Africa suggests that the first crops arrived into Morocco through a maritime route, more likely from the Central or Northern Mediterranean shores. Similarities in both radiocarbon dates and crop assemblages from early Neolithic sites in Northern Morocco and the south of the Iberian Peninsula point to an almost simultaneous East to West maritime spread of agriculture along both shores of the Western Mediterranean.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42462
ISSN: 1040-6182
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2016.01.066
Source: Quaternary International [ISSN 1040-6182], v. 412, p. 96-109
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