Palaeoenvironmental Framing of the O Areal Roman Saltworks and Related Anthropogenic Activities in North-western Iberia

被引:3
|
作者
Lopez-Merino, Lourdes [1 ,7 ]
Tallon-Armada, Rebeca [2 ]
Costa-Casais, Manuela [3 ]
Silva-Sanchez, Noemi [4 ]
Lopez-Saez, Jose Antonio [5 ]
Cortizas, Antonio Martinez [2 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Complutense Madrid, Fac Farm, Unidad Bot, ENVIROVEG Grupo UCM 910164, Madrid, Spain
[2] Univ Santiago De Compostela, Dept Edafoloxia Quim Agr, Fac Biol, CRETUS, EcoPast GI-1553, Santiago De Compostela, Spain
[3] Univ Santiago De Compostela, Dept Xeog, Fac Xeog & Hist, Santiago De Compostela, Spain
[4] CSIC, Inst Ciencias Patrimonio, Consejo Super Invest Cient INCIPIT, Santiago De Compostela, Spain
[5] CSIC, Ctr Ciencias Humanas & Sociales, GI Arqueol Medioambiental, Inst Hist,Consejo Super Invest Cient CCHS, Madrid, Spain
[6] Stockholm Univ, Bolin Ctr Climate Res, Stockholm, Sweden
[7] Univ Complutense Madrid, Fac Farm, Unidad Bot, ENVIROVEG Grupo UCM 910164, Madrid 28040, Spain
关键词
Roman saltworks; Atlantic coast; palynology; geochemistry; stratigraphy; environmental change; OMBROTROPHIC PEAT BOGS; RIA-DE-VIGO; ATMOSPHERIC PB; CLIMATE-CHANGE; NW IBERIA; POLLEN; SPAIN; EUROPE; CANNABIS; LAKE;
D O I
10.1080/14614103.2023.2206199
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
The NW Iberian city of Vigo contains buried structures of a Roman salinae that follow the ancient coastline. To investigate its environmental legacy, we studied two pedo-sedimentary profiles at the O Areal saltworks to reconstruct human activities during and after the salinae use, as well as framing them within the last two millennia of climate variability. The bottom layer consists of organic-rich sands, with marine palynomorphs, confined within the saltworks' structures that operated during the Early Roman Empire, when the demand in fish-salted products increased and the salting industry fluorished on the Atlantic coast of Iberia. During the Late Roman Empire, salt production at the O Areal may have ended, coeval with the development of a marsh with hydro-hygrophyte vegetation and the salting industry demise. The Roman environment also experienced intense agropastoralism that triggered water eutrophication. After Roman times, a dune phase sealed the archaeologicl structures. The overall trend points to a shift from a marine to a terrestrial setting coeval to known periods of climate variability. Therefore, humans and climate impacted the coast during the last two millennia, including the very intense Roman-period saltworks, agriculture and livestock. Roman times climate would have also influenced the saltworks' establishment and abandonment.
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页数:25
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