The paper reports two study cases showing integrated analyses of microscopic records (pollen, co- prophilous fungi and parasites remains) which are of basic importance to reconstruct past breed- ing and pastoral activities in Italy. The sites are located at Piano Locce (1225 m a.s.l., Barisciano, L’Aquila) in a depression in a mountain area and in the Bradano Valley (about 150-500 m a.s.l., Basilicata) in a hilly area rich in archaeological sites.The pollen-based palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of Piano Locce provided the history of plants landscape from around 36.000 years BP. Before the Holocene, a steppe vegetation and a grassland characterized the area where wild animals freely browsed. This assumption is strongly supported by the association of spores of coprophilous fungi with intestinal parasites eggs (Dicrocoelium) and pollen clumps. The trend of coprophilous fungi and pollen assemblages including Anthropogenic Indicators shows that, after the wild animals browsing, a fairly continuous presence of domesticated animals, prevalently ovicaprines, interested the area in the Holocene.The archaeological sites of Difesa San Biagio and Altojanni in Bradano Valley showed evidences of ovicaprine-farming and cattle breeding during Hellenistic and Mediaeval periods. In particular, Cichorioideae, Chenopodiaceae and Brassicaceae pollen and spores of coprophilous fungi (such as Sordaria type, Sporormiella and Podospora type) attest the predominance of pastoral activities dur- ing the Hellenistic period at San Biagio. A greater pollen biodiversity characterizes Altojanni, where spores of the coprophilous fungi were associated with spores of fungi with a different ecology as Chaetomium and Valsaria variospora type. The environmental and microarchaeobotanical contexts are in agreement with archaeological evidences that attest the presence of domestic animals, prob- ably cattle, maintained in this site during Middle Ages.

Indicatori di pascolo microscopici: polline, spore di funghi coprofili e uova di parassiti / Torri, Paola; Florenzano, Assunta; Montecchi, Maria Chiara; Miola, A.; Mercuri, Anna Maria. - STAMPA. - x:(2011), pp. 103-104. (Intervento presentato al convegno La lana nella Cisalpina romana: economia e società tenutosi a Padova nel 18-20 maggio 2011).

Indicatori di pascolo microscopici: polline, spore di funghi coprofili e uova di parassiti.

TORRI, Paola;FLORENZANO, Assunta;MONTECCHI, Maria Chiara;MERCURI, Anna Maria
2011

Abstract

The paper reports two study cases showing integrated analyses of microscopic records (pollen, co- prophilous fungi and parasites remains) which are of basic importance to reconstruct past breed- ing and pastoral activities in Italy. The sites are located at Piano Locce (1225 m a.s.l., Barisciano, L’Aquila) in a depression in a mountain area and in the Bradano Valley (about 150-500 m a.s.l., Basilicata) in a hilly area rich in archaeological sites.The pollen-based palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of Piano Locce provided the history of plants landscape from around 36.000 years BP. Before the Holocene, a steppe vegetation and a grassland characterized the area where wild animals freely browsed. This assumption is strongly supported by the association of spores of coprophilous fungi with intestinal parasites eggs (Dicrocoelium) and pollen clumps. The trend of coprophilous fungi and pollen assemblages including Anthropogenic Indicators shows that, after the wild animals browsing, a fairly continuous presence of domesticated animals, prevalently ovicaprines, interested the area in the Holocene.The archaeological sites of Difesa San Biagio and Altojanni in Bradano Valley showed evidences of ovicaprine-farming and cattle breeding during Hellenistic and Mediaeval periods. In particular, Cichorioideae, Chenopodiaceae and Brassicaceae pollen and spores of coprophilous fungi (such as Sordaria type, Sporormiella and Podospora type) attest the predominance of pastoral activities dur- ing the Hellenistic period at San Biagio. A greater pollen biodiversity characterizes Altojanni, where spores of the coprophilous fungi were associated with spores of fungi with a different ecology as Chaetomium and Valsaria variospora type. The environmental and microarchaeobotanical contexts are in agreement with archaeological evidences that attest the presence of domestic animals, prob- ably cattle, maintained in this site during Middle Ages.
2011
La lana nella Cisalpina romana: economia e società
Padova
18-20 maggio 2011
Torri, Paola; Florenzano, Assunta; Montecchi, Maria Chiara; Miola, A.; Mercuri, Anna Maria
Indicatori di pascolo microscopici: polline, spore di funghi coprofili e uova di parassiti / Torri, Paola; Florenzano, Assunta; Montecchi, Maria Chiara; Miola, A.; Mercuri, Anna Maria. - STAMPA. - x:(2011), pp. 103-104. (Intervento presentato al convegno La lana nella Cisalpina romana: economia e società tenutosi a Padova nel 18-20 maggio 2011).
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