THE PROBLEM OF THE ALTERNATING DOMINANCE OF DECIDUOUS AND EVERGREEN VEGETATION: ARCHAEO-ANTHRACOLOGICAL DATA FROM NORTHERN MAREMMA
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4462/annbotrm-10269Keywords:
charcoal analysis, climate, human impact, Late Holocene, evergreen Quercus forest, mixed forest, TuscanyAbstract
In order to detect land use and forest cover changes from the 3rd century BC to the half of the 13th century AD in a coastal/sub-coastal area of northern Maremma, charcoal analysis were carried out on two archaeological sites dated between Roman period and Late Middle Age. From the 3rd century BC to the end of Roman Age (6th century AD), the vegetation is characterized by a degraded evergreen Quercus forest with evergreen sclerophyllous shrubs and low macchia; in the Middle Age, from the 10th century AD to the half of the 13th century AD, a mixed forest with evergreen and deciduous species covers the area. Data show that both evergreen Quercus forest and deciduous taxa spread during two warm/dry climatic phases, but respectively in the Roman phase of high human impact and in the Middle Age characterized by a low presence of settlements and anthropic pressure. The vegetation history is independent from the climatic variations characterizing the studied period: deciduous vegetation increases during phases of low human pressure, while evergreen vegetation is related to intense human impact and it is a response of the vegetation to a period of strong land use. The match of detailed archaeoenvironmental data and archaeological data may allow a more complete interpretation of the changes in vegetation cover that characterised Italy and the Mediterranean in the second half HoloceneDownloads
How to Cite
Buonincontri, M., Allevato, E., & Di Pasquale, G. (2013). THE PROBLEM OF THE ALTERNATING DOMINANCE OF DECIDUOUS AND EVERGREEN VEGETATION: ARCHAEO-ANTHRACOLOGICAL DATA FROM NORTHERN MAREMMA. Annali Di Botanica, 3, 165–171. https://doi.org/10.4462/annbotrm-10269
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