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Olive cultivation in the heart of the Persian Achaemenid Empire: new insights into agricultural practices and environmental changes reflected in a late Holocene pollen record from Lake Parishan,SW Iran
Authors:Morteza Djamali  Matthew D Jones  Jérémy Migliore  Silvia Balatti  Marianela Fader  Daniel Contreras  Sébastien Gondet  Zahra Hosseini  Hamid Lahijani  Abdolmajid Naderi  Lyudmila S Shumilovskikh  Margareta Tengberg  Lloyd Weeks
Institution:1.Institut Méditerranéen de Biodiversité et d’Ecologie (IMBE) - UMR CNRS 7263/IRD 237/Aix-Marseille Université/Avignon Université, Technop?le de l’Environnement Arbois-Méditerranée,Aix-en-Provence Cedex 04,France;2.Iranian National Institute for Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences (INIOAS),Tehran,Iran;3.School of Geography,University of Nottingham,Nottingham,UK;4.Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes” and Institut für Klassische Altertumskunde,Christian-Albrechts-Universit?t zu Kiel,Kiel,Germany;5.UMR 5133 Archéorient (CNRS, Université Lyon 2),Lyon Cedex 7,France;6.Laboratoire d’Archéozoologie et Archéobotanique, UMR 7209 CNRS, Département Ecologie et Gestion de la Biodiversité,Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle (MNHN),Paris,France;7.School of Humanities,University of New England,Armidale,Australia
Abstract:Ancient Persia witnessed one of its most prosperous cultural and socio-economic periods between 550 bc and ad 651, with the successive domination of the Achaemenid, Seleucid, Parthian and Sassanian Empires. During this period agricultural activities increased on the Iranian plateau, as demonstrated by a remarkable arboricultural expansion. However, available data are not very informative about the spatial organization of agricultural practices. The possible links between climate conditions and agricultural activities during this millennium of continuous imperial domination are also unclear, due to the lack of parallel human-independent palaeoclimatic proxies. This study presents a new late Holocene pollen-based vegetation record from Lake Parishan, SW Iran. This record provides invaluable information regarding anthropogenic activities before, during and after the empires and sheds light on (i) spatial patterning in agricultural activities and (ii) possible climate impacts on agro-sylvo-pastoral practices during this period. Results of this study indicate that arboriculture was the most prominent form of agricultural activity in SW Iran especially during the Achaemenid, Seleucid and Parthian periods. Contrary to the information provided by some Greco-Roman written sources, the record from Lake Parishan shows that olive cultivation was practiced during Achaemenid and Seleucid times, when olive cultivation was significant, at least in this basin located close to the capital area of the Achaemenid Empire. In addition, pollen from aquatic vegetation suggests that the period of the latter centuries of the first millennium bc was characterized by a higher lake level, which might have favoured cultural and socio-economic prosperity.
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