Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece

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Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece. / Sarri, Kalliopi; Bintliff, John; Farinetti, Emeri; Sebastiani, Renato.

I: Geoarchaeology, Bind 21, Nr. 7, 2006, s. 665-674.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sarri, K, Bintliff, J, Farinetti, E & Sebastiani, R 2006, 'Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece', Geoarchaeology, bind 21, nr. 7, s. 665-674. https://doi.org/10.1002/GEA

APA

Sarri, K., Bintliff, J., Farinetti, E., & Sebastiani, R. (2006). Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece. Geoarchaeology, 21(7), 665-674. https://doi.org/10.1002/GEA

Vancouver

Sarri K, Bintliff J, Farinetti E, Sebastiani R. Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece. Geoarchaeology. 2006;21(7):665-674. https://doi.org/10.1002/GEA

Author

Sarri, Kalliopi ; Bintliff, John ; Farinetti, Emeri ; Sebastiani, Renato. / Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece. I: Geoarchaeology. 2006 ; Bind 21, Nr. 7. s. 665-674.

Bibtex

@article{d6a489e53502430eb67ea2e95bbe6e66,
title = "Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece",
abstract = "Current hyperintensive surface survey in the Tanagra district of Boeotia, central Greece (J. L.Bintliff et al., 2002), together with a recent reanalysis of survey results from the Thespiae dis-trict (J. L. Bintliff et al., 1999), have led to a radical rethinking of how and where early farm-ers exploited the Greek landscape between earliest Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times.This new work is described, and its significance for the wider debates about the Greek land-scape in this period is further discussed, to demonstrate that alongside widely spaced villagesin earlier Neolithic times there were also small, short-lived farms; both were associated withwetland hand cultivation. In later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times, these locationsremained, but vestigial traces discovered by hyperintensive survey methods have identified anexplosion of small, short-lived, and horizontally migrating farms across the newly clearedinterfluve zones. A largely lost alluvial terrace provides a major resource for the earlier, wet-land farming foci.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Aegean Archaeology, Boeotia, Neolithic, Geoarcheology, Landscape Archaeology, settlement history, Tanagra",
author = "Kalliopi Sarri and John Bintliff and Emeri Farinetti and Renato Sebastiani",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1002/GEA",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "665--674",
journal = "Geoarchaeology - An International Journal",
issn = "0883-6353",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Landscape and Early Farming Settlement Dynamics in Central Greece

AU - Sarri, Kalliopi

AU - Bintliff, John

AU - Farinetti, Emeri

AU - Sebastiani, Renato

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - Current hyperintensive surface survey in the Tanagra district of Boeotia, central Greece (J. L.Bintliff et al., 2002), together with a recent reanalysis of survey results from the Thespiae dis-trict (J. L. Bintliff et al., 1999), have led to a radical rethinking of how and where early farm-ers exploited the Greek landscape between earliest Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times.This new work is described, and its significance for the wider debates about the Greek land-scape in this period is further discussed, to demonstrate that alongside widely spaced villagesin earlier Neolithic times there were also small, short-lived farms; both were associated withwetland hand cultivation. In later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times, these locationsremained, but vestigial traces discovered by hyperintensive survey methods have identified anexplosion of small, short-lived, and horizontally migrating farms across the newly clearedinterfluve zones. A largely lost alluvial terrace provides a major resource for the earlier, wet-land farming foci.

AB - Current hyperintensive surface survey in the Tanagra district of Boeotia, central Greece (J. L.Bintliff et al., 2002), together with a recent reanalysis of survey results from the Thespiae dis-trict (J. L. Bintliff et al., 1999), have led to a radical rethinking of how and where early farm-ers exploited the Greek landscape between earliest Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times.This new work is described, and its significance for the wider debates about the Greek land-scape in this period is further discussed, to demonstrate that alongside widely spaced villagesin earlier Neolithic times there were also small, short-lived farms; both were associated withwetland hand cultivation. In later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age times, these locationsremained, but vestigial traces discovered by hyperintensive survey methods have identified anexplosion of small, short-lived, and horizontally migrating farms across the newly clearedinterfluve zones. A largely lost alluvial terrace provides a major resource for the earlier, wet-land farming foci.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Aegean Archaeology

KW - Boeotia

KW - Neolithic

KW - Geoarcheology

KW - Landscape Archaeology

KW - settlement history

KW - Tanagra

U2 - 10.1002/GEA

DO - 10.1002/GEA

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 665

EP - 674

JO - Geoarchaeology - An International Journal

JF - Geoarchaeology - An International Journal

SN - 0883-6353

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 179575949