Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46123
Title: First preliminary evidence for basketry and nut consumption in the Capsian culture (ca. 10,000-7500BP): Archaeobotanical data from new excavations at El Mekta, Tunisia
Authors: Morales, Jacob 
Mulazzani, Simone
Belhouchet, Lotfi
Zazzo, Antoine
Berrio, Laura
Eddargach, Wassel
Cervi, Angela
Hamdi, Hamza
Saidi, Mohamed
Coppa, Alfredo
Peña-Chocarro, Leonor
UNESCO Clasification: 55 Historia
550501 Arqueología
Keywords: Archaeobotany
Acorn
Pine nut
Alfa grass
Food plants, et al
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: 0278-4165
Journal: Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 
Abstract: This paper aims to explore the presence of macro-botanical remains and to assess the role of food plants in sites from the Capsian culture (ca. 10,000–7500 BP). Previous research on the Capsian diet has emphasized the role of land snails and animal resources, but little attention has been paid to the consumption of plants. Here we present the results from the first systematic analysis of charred macro-botanical remains (other than wood charcoal) from a Capsian site. As a case study we have used the data from El Mekta in Tunisia occupied during both the Typical and Upper Capsian periods. Macro-botanical remains were scarce and the evidence of plant use is limited. We identified three taxa including Pinus halepensis, Quercus sp., and Stipa tenacissima. Archaeobotanical and ethnographic evidence suggests that P. halepensis and Quercus sp. could have been used for human consumption while S. tenacissima may have been utilized as a source of fiber for basketry. Decreasing frequencies of Quercus sp. from the Typical to the Upper Capsian levels match well with paleoclimatic proxies pointing to a slow process of desiccation in the region. Capsian populations could have adapted to this environmental change by focusing on the gathering of P. halepensis. We propose that both acorns and pine nuts could have played an important role in the Capsian diet, providing a highly nutritious food source which could also be stored. Archaeobotanical data is limited and definitive conclusions are still at an early stage but we encourage the application of systematic and complete sampling at other Capsian sites in order to test this hypothesis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/46123
ISSN: 0278-4165
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaa.2014.12.005
Source: Journal Of Anthropological Archaeology[ISSN 0278-4165],v. 37, p. 128-139
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