Proceedings of the 16th conference of the International Work Group for Palaeoethnobotany, Thessaloniki 2013
Soultana M. Valamoti
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Felix Bittmann
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F. Bittmann (&) Niedersa chsisches Institut fu r historische Ku stenforschung
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Viktoriastr. 26/28, 26382 Wilhelmshaven
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Germany
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S. M. Valamoti Department of Archaeology, School of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
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54124 Thessalon ki
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Greece
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This volume of Vegetation History and Archaeobotany comprises a collection of papers presented at the 16th conference of the International Work Group for Palaeo- ethnobotany, held at the Research Dissemination Centre (KEDEA) of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece) between June 16th and 22nd 2013. The confer- ence was organised under the auspices of the School of History and Archaeology of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, the Municipality of Thessaloniki, the Hel- lenic Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs, Culture and Sports and the Hellenic Ministry of Rural Development and Food. The Museum of Byzantine Culture hosted the official dinner of the conference. The following institutions financially supported the conference: the Research Com- mittee of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, the Institute of Aegean Prehistory, Foglip-ERC, the Ministry of Rural Development and Food, and Piraeus Bank. Various other sponsors supported the conference with donations in kind (gifts and food/drink): Agrino, Apivita, Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki
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Babatzim wines, Claudia Papagianni wines, Creta Carob, Gerovassileiou wines, Haitoglou, Holomon herbs, Ianos, I Kathimerini, Korres, Kyr Yianni wines, Ligas wines, Masticha Shop
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MIET (National Bank of Greece Cultural Foundation)
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Mylelia, Pantopoleion tis Thessalonikis, Psichalos publications, Rayan
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Nesbitt
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Mark; London, UK Rovner, Irwin; Raleigh, USA Ruas, Marie-Pierre; Paris, F Schwarz, Anton; Innsbruck, A Stika, Hans-Peter; Stuttgart, D
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Heiss
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Andreas; Wien, A Jacomet, Stefanie; Basel, CH Jones, Glynis; Sheffield, UK Jones, Martin; Cambridge, UK Kohler-Schneider, Marianne; Wien, A Kozakova, Radka; Praha, CZ Kreuz, Angela; Wiesbaden, D Kroll, Helmut; Kiel, D Kubiak-Martens, Lucy; Zaandam, NL Lightfoot, Emma; Cambridge, UK Livarda, Alexandra; Nottingham
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UK
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Akeret
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O rni; Basel, CH Allaby, Robin; Warwick, UK Antol n, Ferran; Basel, CH Bakels, Corrie C.; Leiden, NL
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Van Haaster
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Henk; Zaandam, NL White, Chantel; Notre Dame, USA Wiethold, Julian; Metz, F Willcox, George; Jale`s, F Wright, Patti J.; St. Louis, USA Yang, Xiaoqiang; Beijing, CN Zach, Barbara; Bernbeuren, D Zhang, Jianping; Beijing, CN
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crisis. During the five days of talks and posters, a tightly
packed programme presented an organisational challenge
and probably a strain to what one can absorb during a
conference. Yet, it was decided neither to have parallel sessions
nor to cut out any of the sessions proposed by many
organisers on special thematic fields such as Stable isotopes
in plant remains, Food globalization in prehistory across
Eurasia, Dispersal of cultivated plants: the origin and early
spread of naked wheats, The role of wild foods amongst
early farmers and late foragers and Plant archaeogenetics
and archaeogenomics.
In addition to the laboratory session a special
identification workshop on naked cereals took place, organised by
Stefi Jacomet. Another workshop took place where Spatzle
were prepared in the traditional way (organised by Barbara
Zach, Hans-Peter Stika and Moritz Hallama), putting
archaeobotany into action. The dish prepared was a Swabian
speciality consisting of spelt wheat noodles (Spatzle) and
lentils, ingredients frequently occurring in European
Bronze Age archaeobotanical data sets.
In total, nearly 270 participants attended the conference
(Fig. 1). The oral presentations totalled 98 while 164 posters
were presented. For the special issue 50 papers have been
announced, 27 papers were finally submitted of which 20
were accepted for publication after peer-reviewing.
The Original Articles (15) can be divided into
contributions on plant use, economy and methodological aspects
spanning the Neolithic through to the Iron Age (Hartmann
Shenkman et al.; Antolin et al.; Valamoti; Kubiak-Martens
et al.; Martin; Pagnoux et al.), on more methodological and
integrated aspects including taphonomical problems,
geoarchaeology and phytoliths as well as pollen (Pelling et al.;
Peto} et al.; Garca-Granero et al.; Vandorpe and Wick).
These are followed by contributions focussed on plant
foods (cultivation, transformation, offerings) in South
America and China partly taking into account
ethnobotanical aspects (Lema; Capparelli et al.; Jiang et al.) and
two papers on medieval sites and economy from Ireland
and Siberia (McClatchie et al.; Korona).
Four Reviews give overviews and the state of the art of
new glume wheat in France (Toulemonde et al.), advances in
aDNA of plant remains (Brown et al.), stable isotopes
(Fiorentino et al.) and the history of Taxus in southwest Europe
(Uzquiano et al.communicated by C. Bakels). The volume
is completed by a contribution on medieval finds of
Smyrnium olusatrum in the Netherlands (Brinkkemper).
Fig. 1 16th IWGP participants at the KEDEA premises. Photo courtesy of Giannis Tsouflidis
Thus, topics of this volume include early farming,
ancient food and the role of wild plant resources, regional
syntheses or analyses focusing on single species, case
studies, integration of archaeobotanical data and
methodological issues including frontline research methods such
as DNA and isotopic analyses.
The publication of this volume has been generously
funded by the Institute for Aegean Prehistory (INSTAP)
and we wish to express our deepest thanks to INSTAP
and Karen Vellucci for all the help provided in the
process as well as to Judith Terpos and Margaret
Deignan from Springer who helped with all the technical
questions.
A large number of reviewers greatly assisted in the
preparation of this issue; with their perceptive, critical
comments they determined the selection of the submitted
manuscripts and contributed towards improving them. They
are gratefully acknowledged below. Our sincere thanks are
due to James Greig and John Daniell for their thorough copy/
language editing of the manuscripts, guaranteeing a high
language standard of the scientific papers not only for this
volume but also during many years previously.
Acknowledgement to referees
* Multiple reviews
(...truncated)