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Landscape potential for the adoption of crop cultivation: Role of local soil properties and groundwater table rise during 6000–5400 BP in Flevoland (central Netherlands)

Authors :
Don van den Biggelaar
Maarten A. Prins
J.C.A. Kolen
Sjoerd Bohncke
Cornelis Kasse
Ronald van Balen
Sjoerd Kluiving
Geoarchaeology
Antiquity and Archeology
Earth and Climate
Amsterdam Global Change Institute
Art and Culture, History, Antiquity
CLUE+
Source :
van den Biggelaar, D F A M, Kluiving, S J, Bohncke, S J P, van Balen, R T, Kasse, C, Prins, M A & Kolen, J 2015, ' Landscape potential for the adoption of crop cultivation: Role of local soil properties and groundwater table rise during 6000-5400 BP in Flevoland (central Netherlands) ', Quaternary International, vol. 367, pp. 77-95 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2014.09.063, Quaternary International, 367, 77-95. Elsevier Limited, Quaternary International, 367, 77-95
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

This paper presents a new perspective for the temporal variation of crop cultivation adoption during the period 6000-5400BP in Flevoland (central Netherlands) based on the spatial evolution of soils and hydrology. To determine the role of soil properties and groundwater level rise in the adoption of crop cultivation in wetlands, mapping of the mid-Holocene palaeotopography, palaeohydrology, soil conditions and distribution of Swifterbant archaeological remains was combined with grain size analyses of cored sediments in two selected study areas. Results show that the low natural fertility and water holding capacity of the sandy soils on the Pleistocene surface in southern Flevoland compared to the loamy soils in the northern part of Flevoland, can explain the lack of crop cultivation in the south. The relation between natural soil fertility and initial adoption of crop cultivation in the IJssel/Vecht valley corresponds with examples from other wetlands in northwest Europe. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA.

Details

ISSN :
10406182
Volume :
367
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Quaternary International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41b125d43532cff229b7cea47859ceaf