Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/70169
Title: Pots, plants and animals: Broad-spectrum subsistence strategies in the Early Neolithic of the Moroccan Rif region
Authors: Dunne, J.
Manning, K.
Linstädter, J.
Mikdad, A.
Breeze, P.
Hutterer, R.
Lehnig, S.
Morales Mateos, Jacob Bentejui 
Gillard, T.
Drake, N.
Evershed, R. P.
UNESCO Clasification: 2416 Paleontología
Keywords: Animal Management
Dairying
Eastern Rif
Epipalaeolithic
Fauna, et al
Issue Date: 2020
Project: RPG-2016-115 Peopling the Green Sahara? A multi-proxy approach to reconstructing the ecological and demographic history of the Saharan Holocene
Journal: Quaternary International 
Abstract: The transition from hunter-gathering to food-producing societies in the Mediterranean zone of north Africa was complex and variable, likely influenced by local ecological conditions as well as the socio-economic origins of the population. The adoption of domestic plants and animals was piecemeal, with hunting and gathering continuing as an important part of local subsistence strategies. Here, we investigate the timing and extent of the adoption of agricultural practices, namely herding and cultivation, in three diverse coastal and inland Early Neolithic sites in the Mediterranean Maghreb region, namely Ifri Oudadane, Ifri n'Etsedda and Hassi Ouenzga. Results from absorbed lipid residues extracted from 306 potsherds from these sites are correlated with information from faunal and archaeobotanical assemblages. Our findings suggest that agricultural practices, regarded as being of Neolithic origin, were never fully adopted in the Maghreb but rather that these farmer/foragers adopted a range of strategies including low-level food production (exploiting cereals and animal products, including meat and milk), gathering of wild plants and marine shellfish, and hunting both small and large sized game. These broad-spectrum farmer/foragers were clearly both flexible and resourceful and likely adapted their subsistence practices to maximise resource availability in an increasingly unpredictable environment.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/70169
ISSN: 1040-6182
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2019.12.009
Source: Quaternary International [ISSN 1040-6182], v. 555, p. 96-109
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