Middle Neolithic agricultural and land-use models in southern Poland: A case-study of the long-term settlement in Mozgawa

Author:

Korczyńska-Cappenberg Marta1,Nowak Marek2,Mueller-Bieniek Aldona3,Wilczyński Jarosław4ORCID,Pospuła Sylwia4,Wertz Krzysztof4,Kalicki Tomasz5,Biesaga Piotr5,Szwarczewski Piotr6,Kapcia Magda1,Cappenberg Klaus7,Wacnik Agnieszka1,Moskal-del Hoyo Magdalena1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. W. Szafer Institute of Botany, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

2. Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University, Poland

3. Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw, Poland

4. Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland

5. Department of Geomorphology and Geoarchaeology, Jan Kochanowski University in Kielce, Institute of Geography and Environmental Sciences, Poland

6. Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Warsaw, Poland

7. Landesamt für Archäologie Sachsen, Germany

Abstract

Palaeoecological and archaeological studies conducted in Mozgawa (southern Poland) demonstrated a long-term sustainable land-use by inhabitants of a large settlement occupied during the second half of the fourth millennium BC. The Middle Neolithic society established a settlement that covered an area of about 30–35 ha and functioned during at least three centuries, as validated by the absolute chronology. A thorough analysis based on the fuzzy-logic principle combined with archaeobotanical and archaeozoological data showed that the subsistence model was based on agricultural practices, related with both crop cultivation and animal husbandry, together with an important component of hunting, fishing and gathering. Ecological requirements of plants and animals represented by fossil remains suggested that the exploited area included a variety of habitats. In the open landscape, wet and dry grasslands, used partly as pastures, cultivated fields and marshes were present. Wooded areas included deciduous lime-oak-elm forests, also of open canopy type, and riparian forests. This was due to the transitional location of the Mozgawa site on a loess-mantled hill, covered with fertile soils, but right on the border with a vast alluvial plain of the Nida River. Such ecologically diversified micro-region became a managed landscape, which provided rich resources for seasonal diets of the settlement’s inhabitants. The case study of the Mozgawa site offers a unique insight into the palaeoeconomy of the Funnel Beaker culture in central Europe.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

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