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Agricultural terraces in the Mediterranean: medieval intensification revealed by OSL profiling and dating

The history of agricultural terraces remains poorly understood due to problems in dating their construction and use. This has hampered broader research on their significance, limiting knowledge of past agricultural practices and the long-term investment choices of rural communities. The authors appl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Antiquity 2021-06, Vol.95 (381), p.773-790
Main Authors: Turner, Sam, Kinnaird, Tim, Varinlioğlu, Günder, Şerifoğlu, Tevfik Emre, Koparal, Elif, Demirciler, Volkan, Athanasoulis, Dimitris, Ødegård, Knut, Crow, Jim, Jackson, Mark, Bolòs, Jordi, Sánchez-Pardo, José Carlos, Carrer, Francesco, Sanderson, David, Turner, Alex
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The history of agricultural terraces remains poorly understood due to problems in dating their construction and use. This has hampered broader research on their significance, limiting knowledge of past agricultural practices and the long-term investment choices of rural communities. The authors apply OSL profiling and dating to the sediments associated with agricultural terraces across the Mediterranean region to date their construction and use. Results from five widely dispersed case studies reveal that although many terraces were used in the first millennium AD, the most intensive episodes of terrace-building occurred during the later Middle Ages (c. AD 1100–1600). This innovative approach provides the first large-scale evidence for both the longevity and medieval intensification of Mediterranean terraces.
ISSN:0003-598X
1745-1744
DOI:10.15184/aqy.2020.187