Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/73098
Title: Prehistoric Plant Use on La Palma Island (Canary Islands, Spain) An Example of the Disappearance of Agriculture in an Isolated Environment
Authors: Morales Mateos, Jacob Bentejui 
Rodríguez Rodríguez, Amelia Del Carmen 
Marrero, Aguedo
UNESCO Clasification: 241710 Paleobotánica
Issue Date: 2014
Journal: Archaeology Of African Plant Use
Conference: International Workshop on African Archaeobotany (IWAA)
Abstract: © 2014 Taylor & Francis.La Palma is a mountainous and remote island placed in the Canarian Archipelago (Spain) (Figure 17.1). e earliest colonisers arrived to the island from northern Africa approximately in the 1st millennium B.C.E., but it is assumed that they stayed practically isolated from the rest of the archipelago and the mainland for almost two thousand years. When modern Europeans rst made contact with the indigenous people from La Palma, in the 15th century C.E., they reported that the indigenes, ‘Auaritas’, did not practise navigation or cultivation. At this time, they obtained food mainly from the livestock and gathered plant resources (Abreu [1602] 1977; da Zurara [1448] 1998). By contrast, farming was reported as practised in the rest of the archipelago during the pre-Hispanic times (Morales 2010).
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/73098
ISBN: 978-1-61132-974-2
DOI: 10.4324/9781315434018-23
Source: Archaeology Of African Plant Use, v. 61, p. 195-204, (2014)
Appears in Collections:Actas de congresos
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