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      Farming and foraging in Neolithic Ireland: an archaeobotanical perspective

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          Abstract

          Abstract

          Ireland has often been seen as marginal in the spread of the Neolithic and of early farming throughout Europe, in part due to the paucity of available data. By integrating and analysing a wealth of evidence from unpublished reports, a much more detailed picture of early arable agriculture has emerged. The improved chronological resolution reveals changing patterns in the exploitation of different plant species during the course of the Neolithic that belie simplistic notions of a steady intensification in farming, juxtaposed with a concomitant decline in foraging. It is possible that here, as in other areas of Europe, cereal cultivation became less important in the later Neolithic.

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          Most cited references21

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          Deposition models for chronological records

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            Dates as Data: An Examination of the Peruvian Preceramic Radiocarbon Record

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              Did Neolithic farming fail? The case for a Bronze Age agricultural revolution in the British Isles

              This paper rewrites the early history of Britain, showing that while the cultivation of cereals arrived there in about 4000 cal BC, it did not last. Between 3300 and 1500 BC Britons became largely pastoral, reverting only with a major upsurge of agricultural activity in the Middle Bronze Age. This loss of interest in arable farming was accompanied by a decline in population, seen by the authors as having a climatic impetus. But they also point to this period as the time of construction of the great megalithic monuments, including Stonehenge. We are left wondering whether pastoralism was all that bad, and whether it was one intrusion after another that set the agenda on the island.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Antiquity
                Antiquity
                Antiquity Publications
                0003-598X
                1745-1744
                April 2016
                April 06 2016
                April 2016
                : 90
                : 350
                : 302-318
                Article
                10.15184/aqy.2015.212
                dda2570b-5844-433e-bc9a-22abd8d1a692
                © 2016

                https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms

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