Laboratory for Sedimentary Archaeology, Department of Maritime Civilizations, Recanati Institute of Maritime Studies, Leon H. Charney School of Marine Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Jacob M. Alkow Department of Archaeology and Ancient Near Eastern Cultures, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
PLoS One. 2020 Oct 14;15(10):e0239227. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239227. eCollection 2020.
Sustainable resource management is of central importance among agrarian societies in marginal drylands. In the Negev Desert, Israel, research on agropastoral resource management during Late Antiquity emphasizes intramural settlement contexts and landscape features. The importance of hinterland trash deposits as diachronic archives of resource use and disposal has been overlooked until recently. Without these data, assessments of community-scale responses to societal, economic, and environmental disruption and reconfiguration remain incomplete. In this study, micro-geoarchaeological investigations were conducted on trash mound features at the Byzantine-Early Islamic sites of Shivta, Elusa, and Nesanna to track spatiotemporal trends in the use and disposal of critical agropastoral resources. Refuse derived sediment deposits were characterized using stratigraphy, micro-remains (i.e., livestock dung spherulites, wood ash pseudomorphs, and plant phytoliths), and mineralogy by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Our investigations detected a turning point in the management of herbivore livestock dung, a vital resource in the Negev. We propose that the scarcity of raw dung proxies in the studied deposits relates to the use of this resource as fuel and agricultural fertilizer. Refuse deposits contained dung ash, indicating the widespread use of dung as a sustainable fuel. Sharply contrasting this, raw dung was dumped and incinerated outside the village of Nessana. We discuss how this local shift in dung management corresponds with a growing emphasis on sedentised herding spurred by newly pressed taxation and declining market-oriented agriculture. Our work is among the first to deal with the role of waste management and its significance to economic strategies and urban development during the late Roman Imperial Period and Late Antiquity. The findings contribute to highlighting top-down societal and economic pressures, rather than environmental degradation, as key factors involved in the ruralisation of the Negev agricultural heartland toward the close of Late Antiquity.
可持续资源管理在边缘干旱地区的农业社会中至关重要。在以色列内盖夫沙漠,对古代晚期农牧资源管理的研究强调了城内定居点的背景和景观特征。直到最近,人们才开始关注内陆垃圾堆积作为资源利用和处置的历时性档案的重要性。如果没有这些数据,就无法全面评估社区对社会、经济和环境破坏及重构的反应。在这项研究中,对 Shivta、Elusa 和 Nesanna 的拜占庭-早期伊斯兰遗址的垃圾土丘特征进行了微地质考古调查,以追踪关键农牧资源利用和处置的时空趋势。使用地层学、微残留(即牲畜粪便球晶、木灰假晶和植物植硅石)和傅里叶变换红外光谱法对废物衍生沉积物进行了特征描述。我们的研究在管理食草家畜粪便方面发现了一个转折点,这是内盖夫的一种重要资源。我们提出,在所研究的沉积物中缺乏原始粪便代用品与将这种资源用作燃料和农业肥料有关。垃圾沉积物中含有粪便灰烬,表明粪便作为可持续燃料的广泛使用。与此形成鲜明对比的是,原始粪便被倾倒和焚烧在 Nessana 村外。我们讨论了这种粪便管理方式的转变如何与新征收的税收和不断下降的面向市场的农业推动的定居化放牧的日益重视相吻合。我们的工作是首批研究废物管理作用及其对罗马帝国晚期和古代晚期经济战略和城市发展意义的工作之一。研究结果有助于突出社会和经济压力(而不是环境恶化)是导致内盖夫农业中心向古代晚期末期农村化的关键因素。