Economy and environment of Bronze Age settlements - Terramaras - on the Po Plain (Northern Italy): first results from the archaeobotanical research at the Terramara di Montale
The paper presents a synthesis of the on-site
archaeobotanical investigations of the Terramara di
Montale, one of the most important sites of the Terramara
cultural system which characterised the Po Plain in the
Middle-Late Bronze Age (1650–1200 b.c.). Samples for
pollen analysis and macroremains, including seed/fruit and
wood/charcoal records, were collected from stratigraphic
sequences and occupation levels during the excavations
1996–2001. The results permitted the reconstruction of the
main characteristics of the landscape which at the onset of
the Terramara rapidly passed from a natural, more forested
landscape with mixed oak wood and conifers to a more
open and anthropic landscape characterised by cereal
fields, pastures and meadows. People felled oaks and other
trees such as Populus/Salix and Fraxinus to make piles
or walls for houses. Wood from these species was also
recorded as charcoal in the hearths. Palynological and carpological
data show that the inhabitants of the Terramara
largely founded their economy on cereals (mainly Triticum
aestivum/durum, T. dicoccum and Hordeum vulgare).
They also grew a few legumes (Vicia faba var. minor,
Vicia sp. and Lens culinaris). There was also grazing by
domestic animals, mainly ovicaprines but also pigs and
cattle, and these were fed exploiting wild plants such as
Carpinus. In the paper the four main steps of the history
of the Terramara are described (before the Terramara, the
onset, the Terramara phase, the decline) during which both
human influence and climatic changes were important. At
the onset of the Terramara (around 1600 b.c.) a warm and
possibly dry phase occurred. The intense use of the territory
and a climatic deterioration at around 1300 b.c. might
have triggered the decline of the Terramara di Montale