Veen, van der, M. and Jones, G. (2006). A re-analysis of agricultural production and consumption:. Vegetation Hist Archaeobotany 15 (3). Vol 15(3), pp. 217-228.

Title
Title
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Title:
A re-analysis of agricultural production and consumption:
Subtitle
Subtitle
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Subtitle:
implications for understanding the British Iron Age
Issue
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Issue:
Vegetation Hist Archaeobotany 15 (3)
Series
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Series:
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany
Volume
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Volume:
15 (3)
Page Start/End
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Page Start/End:
217 - 228
Biblio Note
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Abstract
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Abstract:
Patterning in the carbonized seed assemblages from Iron Age sites in Britain has led to the development of several explanatory models. The most influential of these, by Martin Jones, proposed that grain-rich assemblages represent producer sites and weed-/chaff-rich assemblages consumer sites. The assumptions underlying this model and the method of constructing the diagrams are discussed and a new approach is put forward, stressing the need for appropriate levels of analysis and interpretation. It is concluded that a predominance of grain-rich samples is far more likely to be an indicator of the scale of production and consumption, than a means of distinguishing between the two. A review of the evidence from Iron Age Britain indicates that grain-rich site assemblages primarily occur in the south of the country, and frequently co-occur with pits, used for the storage of surplus grain. Moreover, such pits are concentrated in hillforts. It is proposed that the grain stored in such pits may have been used in large communal feasts and that the hillforts functioned as locations for feasting.
Author
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Author:
Marijke Veen, van der
Glynis Jones
Year of Publication
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Year of Publication:
2006
Locations
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Subjects / Periods:
PIT (Monument Type England)
Iron Age (Auto Detected Temporal)
Grain (Auto Detected Subject)
Iron Age Britain (Auto Detected Temporal)
Hillforts (Auto Detected Subject)
Source
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BIAB (The British & Irish Archaeological Bibliography (BIAB))
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URI: http://www.springerlink.com/content/0939-6314
Created Date
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Created Date:
31 Jul 2007