Modeling wood acquisition strategies from archaeological charcoal remains |
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Authors: | John M. Marston |
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Affiliation: | aUniversity of California, Los Angeles, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, A210 Fowler Building, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1510, United States |
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Abstract: | Archaeological charcoal remains are often used to reconstruct local woodland composition in the past, but rarely address how and why people may have selected specific woody taxa for particular purposes. Models from the field of human behavioral ecology predict that people forage for wood resources by taking into account the relative usefulness, abundance, and handling time related to procuring different wood types. Archaeological and ecological data from the site of Gordion, in Central Anatolia (modern Turkey), were used to test expectations associated with such models. Results suggest that inhabitants of Gordion used wood types for fuel in proportion to their local availability, but that they selected specific, more distant woods for construction. In most occupation periods pine was preferred for construction, perhaps because it produces long, straight timbers for roofing, despite the distance at which it grows from the site. This case study demonstrates that behavioral ecology modeling can help to distinguish between multiple wood acquisition strategies potentially used in the past and improve our understanding of wood use from archaeological charcoal remains. |
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Keywords: | Wood use Human behavioral ecology Foraging models Charcoal analysis Paleoethnobotany Anatolia |
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