학술논문

Alternative strategies to agriculture: the evidence for climatic shocks and cereal declines during the British Neolithic and Bronze Age (a reply to Bishop).
Document Type
Article
Source
World Archaeology. Dec2015, Vol. 47 Issue 5, p856-875. 20p.
Subject
*AGRICULTURAL history
*AGRICULTURE
*CLIMATE change research
*PLANT remains (Archaeology)
*GRAIN farming
*SUBSISTENCE farming
POPULATION history
Language
ISSN
0043-8243
Abstract
Our suggestion that agriculture was temporarily abandoned for several centuries throughout much of mainland Britain after 3600 BC has provoked criticism, notably the claim by Bishop (2015) that we have missed continuity in Scotland. We demonstrate that firm evidence for widespread agriculture within the later Neolithic is still unproven. We trace the disappearance of cereals and the associated population collapse to a probable climatic shift that impacted the abundance of rainfall and lowered temperatures, thus affecting the reliability of cereals. Divergent strategies and patterns are identified on the Scottish Islands versus the mainland, which has more in common with England, Wales and Ireland. We argue that climate shocks disrupt existing subsistence patterns, to which varied responses are represented by divergent island and mainland patterns, both in the Late Neolithic and during the Early and Middle Bronze Age. Favourable climates encouraged population growth and subsistence innovation, such as at the start of the Neolithic and in the Beaker period. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]