Author:
Ryan Saskia E.,Douville Eric,Dapoigny Arnaud,Deschamps Pierre,Battesti Vincent,Guihou Abel,Lebon Matthieu,Rohmer Jérôme,Dabrowski Vladimir,Dal Prà Patricia,Nehmé Laïla,Zazzo Antoine,Bouchaud Charlène
Abstract
With a view to understanding the dynamics of ancient trade and agrobiodiversity, archaeobotanical remains provide a means of tracing the trajectories of certain agricultural commodities. A prime example is cotton in Arabia, a plant that is non-native but has been found in raw seed and processed textile form at Hegra and Dadan, in the region of al-ʿUlā, north-western Saudi Arabia—sites of critical importance given their role in the trans-Arabian trading routes during Antiquity. Here, we demonstrate that the measurement of strontium isotopes from pre-cleaned archaeological cotton is methodologically sound and is an informative addition to the study of ancient plant/textile provenance, in this case, putting forward evidence for local production of cotton in oasis agrosystems and possible external supply. The presence of locally-grown cotton at these sites from the late 1st c. BCE–mid 6th c. CE is significant as it demonstrates that cotton cultivation in Arabia was a Pre-Islamic socio-technical feat, while imported cotton highlights the dynamism of trade at that time.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
1 articles.
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