|
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/27750
|
Title: | Environmental archaeology from a Roman Villa at Spoletino (Viterbo, Italy) |
Authors: | Mayya, Seba |
Advisors: | Magri, Donatella Celant, Alessandra Borgia, Emanuela |
Keywords: | Environmental archaeology Anthracological remains (charred) Pollens grains Diatoms |
Issue Date: | 22-Mar-2019 |
Publisher: | Universidade de Évora |
Abstract: | Abstract:
My thesis focuses on the reconstruction of environmental conditions and land use in the Tiber
Valley during the 1st century AD, as highlighted by a combination of archaeological and
archaeobotanical studies. The study site is a cistern connected with a Roman Villa at Spoletino,
in the province of Viterbo, which was a very important rural site of central Italy during the Roman
Imperial Age. The importance of the site lays in the exceptional richness of different kinds of
materials, especially in a high quantity of pottery pertaining to various typologies (from domestic
to storage use), recovered from a large cistern and studied within a collaboration between
Sapienza Università di Roma (Dipartimento di Biologia Ambientale and Dipartimento di Scienze
dell’Antichità) and the Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici of Università di Roma Tre. The
discovery of the cistern, with its important artifacts, dates back to 2014 and the excavation works
continued until 2018: the site retains a special attention as the region’s organization in the Roman
period is quite unknown, whereas it was of fundamental significance for its advantageous
position within the Tiber valley granting a direct connection to Rome itself. Multiple
methodological approaches were used to study plant micro- and macroremains, including pollen,
diatoms, and charcoal, identified through light and stereomicroscope, as well as through
Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (ESEM). The results shed light on the natural
conditions of the area surrounding the Roman Villa during the early Roman Imperial Age as
indicated by pollen analysis, on the aquatic environment of the cistern reconstructed through
diatoms, and on the human activity towards exploitation of the natural resources and cultivation
of fruit trees, as provided by charcoal analysis, complemented by pollen data. The main floristic
elements of the surrounding woodlands were deciduous and evergreen oaks, accompanied by
other tree taxa, such as elms. My data suggest intentional plantation and management of Olea,
Juglans and possibly Prunus, while herbaceous taxa indicate agropastoral activities in the
Spoletino area. The variety and complementarity of plant remains provide new insights into the
relation between man and landscape in the Roman times, in this strategic area in the Tiber Valley
that was until now uninvestigated from both the archaeological and archaeobotanical points of
view |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/27750 |
Type: | masterThesis |
Appears in Collections: | BIB - Formação Avançada - Teses de Mestrado
|
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|