We describe a combined geoarchaeological and archaeobotanical approach applied to the study of firing activities that have been carried out in a compound in the Central Sahara between the 3rd aand 1st century BC. The archaeological investigation has uncovered a mud-brick wall collapses, preserving an interesting sequence of living floors, whose micromorphological study is unique for the Central Sahara. This investigation together with the mineralogical analysis of sediments, confirms the field attribution of archaeological features as domestic fireplaces, and identified the living floors as areas devoted to animal penning, probably subjected to periodical firing. The investigation also highlights an exceptional concentration of gypsum pedofeatures, presumably determined by the wood type selected for fuel. The archaeobotanical study identified a good quantity of charcoal and other plant remains in the same layers. Most of the charcoal has been identified as Central Tamarix, which is the most common tree living in the oasis today. This suggests that tamarisk wood was the most exploited tree for fuel, and its combustion led to the dispersion of gypsum from the plant tissue, later recrystallized in the shape of microcrystalline nodules, lenses, and euhedral crystals.

Domestic firing activities and fuel consumption in a Saharan oasis. Micromorphological and archaeobotanical evidence from the Garamantian site of Fewet (Central Sahara, SW Libya) / Mori, Lucia; Zerboni, Andrea; Bosi, Giovanna; Buldrini, Fabrizio; Bernasconi, Andrea; Gatto Maria, Carmela; Mercuri Anna, Maria. - In: JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS. - ISSN 0140-1963. - STAMPA. - 144:(2017), pp. 123-138.

Domestic firing activities and fuel consumption in a Saharan oasis. Micromorphological and archaeobotanical evidence from the Garamantian site of Fewet (Central Sahara, SW Libya)

MORI, Lucia
;
2017

Abstract

We describe a combined geoarchaeological and archaeobotanical approach applied to the study of firing activities that have been carried out in a compound in the Central Sahara between the 3rd aand 1st century BC. The archaeological investigation has uncovered a mud-brick wall collapses, preserving an interesting sequence of living floors, whose micromorphological study is unique for the Central Sahara. This investigation together with the mineralogical analysis of sediments, confirms the field attribution of archaeological features as domestic fireplaces, and identified the living floors as areas devoted to animal penning, probably subjected to periodical firing. The investigation also highlights an exceptional concentration of gypsum pedofeatures, presumably determined by the wood type selected for fuel. The archaeobotanical study identified a good quantity of charcoal and other plant remains in the same layers. Most of the charcoal has been identified as Central Tamarix, which is the most common tree living in the oasis today. This suggests that tamarisk wood was the most exploited tree for fuel, and its combustion led to the dispersion of gypsum from the plant tissue, later recrystallized in the shape of microcrystalline nodules, lenses, and euhedral crystals.
2017
Late Holocene; Saharan Oasis; domestic fireplaces; fuel; anthracology; thin section micro morphology; gypsum redistribution; tamarix
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Domestic firing activities and fuel consumption in a Saharan oasis. Micromorphological and archaeobotanical evidence from the Garamantian site of Fewet (Central Sahara, SW Libya) / Mori, Lucia; Zerboni, Andrea; Bosi, Giovanna; Buldrini, Fabrizio; Bernasconi, Andrea; Gatto Maria, Carmela; Mercuri Anna, Maria. - In: JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS. - ISSN 0140-1963. - STAMPA. - 144:(2017), pp. 123-138.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/978803
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