Agronomic conditions and crop evolution in ancient Near East agriculture

Author

Araus Ortega, José Luis

Ferrio Díaz, Juan Pedro

Voltas Velasco, Jordi

Aguilera, Mònica

Buxó i Capdevila, Ramon

Publication date

2015-11-24T09:09:20Z

2015-11-24T09:09:20Z

2014



Abstract

The appearance of agriculture in the Fertile Crescent propelled the development of Western civilization. Here we investigate the evolution of agronomic conditions in this region by reconstructing cereal kernel weight and using stable carbon and nitrogen isotope signatures of kernels and charcoal from a set of 11 Upper Mesopotamia archaeological sites, with chronologies spanning from the onset of agriculture to the turn of the era. We show that water availability for crops, inferred from carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13C), was two- to fourfold higher in the past than at present, with a maximum between 10,000 and 8,000 cal BP. Nitrogen isotope composition (δ15N) decreased over time, which suggests cultivation occurring under gradually less-fertile soil conditions. Domesticated cereals showed a progressive increase in kernel weight over several millennia following domestication. Our results provide a first comprehensive view of agricultural evolution in the Near East inferred directly from archaeobotanical remains.


This work was partially supported by the DGI project CGL2009-13079-C02 and the ERC-Advanced grant 230561 (AGRIWESTMED). We thank George Willcox, Archéorient CNRS, France and Miquel Molist, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain, for their support and comments.

Document Type

article
submittedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Biological sciences; Evolution; Palaeontology; Conreu; Paleontologia

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Related items

MICINN/PN2008-2011/CGL2009-13079-C02

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4953

Nature Communications, 2014, vol. 5, núm. 3953, p. 1-17

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/230561

Rights

(c) Nature Publishing Group, 2014

This item appears in the following Collection(s)