Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/132723
Título: Oued Beht, Morocco: a complex early farming society in north-west Africa and its implications for western Mediterranean interaction during later prehistory
Autores/as: Broodbank, Cyprian
Lucarini, Giulio
Bokbot, Youssef
Benattia, Hamza
Bigoulimen, Aicha
Farr, Lucy
Garcia-Molsosa, Arnau
Hachami, Hassan
Laoutari, Rafael
Lombardi, Lorena
Marsilio, Adelaide
Martin, Louise
Morales, Jacob 
Radi, Moad
Rega, Francesco Michele
Wilkinson, Toby
Clasificación UNESCO: 550302 Historia regional
Palabras clave: Maghreb
Mediterranean
Neolithic
Storage Pits
Farming, et al.
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Publicación seriada: Antiquity 
Resumen: The Maghreb (north-west Africa) played an important role during the Palaeolithic and later in connecting the western Mediterranean from the Phoenician to Islamic periods. Yet, knowledge of its later prehistory is limited, particularly between c. 4000 and 1000 BC. Here, the authors present the first results of investigations at Oued Beht, Morocco, revealing a hitherto unknown farming society dated to c. 3400-2900 BC. This is currently the earliest and largest agricultural complex in Africa beyond the Nile corridor. Pottery and lithics, together with numerous pits, point to a community that brings the Maghreb into dialogue with contemporaneous wider western Mediterranean developments.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/132723
ISSN: 0003-598X
DOI: 10.15184/aqy.2024.101
Fuente: Antiquity [ISSN 0003-598X], (2024)
Colección:Artículos
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