Cultivating societies research project |
The project aim was to assess the timing, extent and nature of agriculture in Neolithic
Ireland. Our dataset was derived from both published and unpublished
archaeological and environmental evidence, and we focused on plant macro-remains,
pollen, settlement and radiocarbon data. The UCC presentation will examine
evidence for an early ‘boom’ in settlement evidence and cereal farming,
followed by significant changes in the nature of archaeological and
environmental records at a time of possibly worsening climatic conditions.
Experimental emmer wheat |
Domesticated animals and
crops were introduced into Ireland during the centuries after 4000 cal BC. My
work on the "Cultivating societies" project focused on assessing the archaeological evidence for cereal production. We concluded that emmer wheat (Triticum
dicoccum Schübl.) was the dominant cereal type in Neolithic Ireland, at least
during the earlier period (McClatchie et al. in press). Emmer wheat is an ancient type of wheat that was very
important in prehistoric Ireland, but now is rarely grown.
The domestication of emmer wheat took place more than 10,000 years ago in south-west Asia. Domesticated cereals, including emmer wheat, then spread via the eastern Mediterranean into south-east Europe, arriving in southern Greece c. 7000 cal BC and reaching Ireland, Britain and Scandinavia around 3000 years later. Emmer wheat was the dominant cereal type in many early farming societies throughout Europe.
Emmer wheat is a 'hulled wheat', which means that the grains are tightly enclosed by cereal chaff, making separation of grain from chaff a time-consuming process. On the other hand, the chaff of hulled wheats provides an excellent barrier to protect against water and insect damage during storage of the crop.
Grains and chaff of emmer wheat |
References
McClatchie, M, Bogaard, A, Colledge, S, Whitehouse, N, Schulting, R, Barratt, P, McLaughlin, R (in press) Neolithic farming in north-western Europe: archaeobotanical evidence from Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2012.10.022Whitehouse, NJ, Schulting, RJ, McClatchie, M, Barratt, P, McLaughlin, TR, Bogaard, A, Colledge, S, Marchant, R, Gaffrey, J, Bunting, MJ (in press) Neolithic agriculture on the European western frontier: the boom and bust of early farming in Ireland. Journal of Archaeological Science. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2013.08.009