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Expanding the plain: Using archaeobotany to examine adaptation to the 5.2 kya climate change event during the Anatolian Late Chalcolithic at Çadır Höyük

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Abstract This study examines how the population at Cadir Hoyuk on the north central Anatolian plateau modified agricultural and fuel use practices in response to rapid social and environmental change… Click to show full abstract

Abstract This study examines how the population at Cadir Hoyuk on the north central Anatolian plateau modified agricultural and fuel use practices in response to rapid social and environmental change between 3600 and 2900 BCE (Late Chalcolithic and Transitional to Early Bronze periods). Using descriptive and multivariate statistics to explore data from 60 archaeobotanical samples spanning three periods of occupation (3600–3200 BCE, 3300–3100 BCE, and 3100–2900 BCE) the results reveal that the inhabitants of Cadir relied heavily on barley, emmer, lentils, and flax throughout the Late Chalcolithic. Both dung and wood were used as fuel, although dung fuel appears to have been preferentially used. The most significant change throughout this period was a shift from foddering animals to grazing animals on the steppe. This shift corresponded with the 5.2 kya event, a period of increased aridity at the very end of the 4th millennium BCE. By diversifying their agricultural strategies to more risk adverse practices, the population at Cadir demonstrated their ability to be resilient in the face of climate change.

Keywords: change; climate change; expanding plain; bce; late chalcolithic; event

Journal Title: Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports
Year Published: 2021

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