Neolithic human impact on the landscapes of North-East Hungary inferred from pollen and settlement records

In this article, we discuss the Neolithic and Early Copper Age (ECA) part of two pollen records from the Middle Tisza Floodplain in association with the local archaeological settlement record. We address the hypothesis of Willis and Bennett (2004) that there was little human impact by farmers on the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vegetation history and archaeobotany 2012-08, Vol.21 (4/5), p.279-302
Hauptverfasser: Magyari, Enikő K., Chapman, John, Fairbairn, Andrew S., Francis, Mark, de Guzman, Margarita
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container_issue 4/5
container_start_page 279
container_title Vegetation history and archaeobotany
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creator Magyari, Enikő K.
Chapman, John
Fairbairn, Andrew S.
Francis, Mark
de Guzman, Margarita
description In this article, we discuss the Neolithic and Early Copper Age (ECA) part of two pollen records from the Middle Tisza Floodplain in association with the local archaeological settlement record. We address the hypothesis of Willis and Bennett (2004) that there was little human impact by farmers on the environment of SE Europe until the Bronze Age. Contrary to this hypothesis, our results show that small-scale agriculture and woodland clearance is already attestable in the earliest Neolithic in Eastern Hungary, there are signs of expanding scale of mixed farming in the Middle Neolithic and strong evidence for extensive landscape alterations with enhanced pasturing and mixed farming in the Late Neolithic (LN) and ECA. The main vegetation exploitation techniques in the alluvial plain of Sarló-hát were selective tree felling (mainly Quercus), coppicing (mainly Corylus and Ulmus) and woodland clearance to establish grazing pastures and smallscale crop farming. Comparison with other well-dated pollen diagrams from Eastern Hungary suggested that, in the Early and Middle Neolithic (8000-7000 cal. B.P.), Corylus and Ulmus coppicing were probably frequent, while pastoral activities and associated woodland clearance is distinguished in the LN (7000-6500 cal. B.P.). Our data also suggested a shift to moister summer conditions in the alluvium during the ECA, which may have contributed to a trend towards settlement dispersion and increased reliance on animal husbandry in the NE Hungarian Plain.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00334-012-0350-6
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subjects Alluvial deposits
Alluvial plains
Alluvium
Animal husbandry
Anthropology
Archaeology
Biogeosciences
Central and Eastern Europe
Climate Change
Copper age
Coppicing
Corylus
Crops
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Environmental studies
Europe
Farming
Floodplains
Flora
Human impact
Human influences
Hypotheses
Landscape
Meadows
Methodology and general studies
Neolithic
Neolithic and chalcolithic
Original Article
Paleontology
Pasture
Plants
Pollen
Prehistory and protohistory
Steppes
Stone Age
Vegetation
Woodlands
title Neolithic human impact on the landscapes of North-East Hungary inferred from pollen and settlement records
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