Cereal Agriculture
 
Does
your site contain any of these? --(Cut Phytolith)
Could
people have been using one of these?
(Photo by Linda Scott
Cummings)
(Photo by Patricia Anderson)
Presesnce
of cut phytoliths indicates use of threashing sledges
(tribulum, trillo and various other names). These tools
for cutting straw and threashing cereals are ancient,
dating back to at least 8000 B.C. in the Near East.
They were part of the tool kit that accompanied diffusion
of argiculture involving cereal grains within the Old
World and from the Old World to the New World.
Recovery of
cut phytoliths can be used to identify ancient or historic
use of bladed threshing sledges. Some ideas of types
of samples to test:
- threshing
floors
- adobe
bricks, mud bricks, or places where adobe or mud was
mixed
- storage
(areas in rooms, structures), silos
- groundstone
washes
- residue
in vessels
- vessel
washes
- hearths,
kilns, ash
- animal
dung, places where animal dung was used or stored
- animal
enclosures
- places
where animal feed was stored
SEE
PAPERS FOR MORE INFORMATION
Updated
7-8-03
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