"Slash and burn" or "weed and manure"? A modelling approach to explore hypotheses of late Neolithic crop cultivation in pre-alpine wetland sites
Authored by Tilman Baum, Claas Nendel, Stefanie Jacomet, Miquel Colobran, Renate Ebersbach
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s00334-016-0583-x
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Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
The record of prehistoric crop cultivation in central Europe dates as
far back as 5500 bc. In the pile-dwellings of the north-western
pre-alpine forelands, dating roughly from 4300 to 800 bc, favourable
taphonomic conditions provide evidence for the ways of cereal
cultivation and consumption in unmatched detail. Based on different sets
of (bio-) archaeological and palynological evidence, different
hypotheses of crop husbandry methods have been developed for the wetland
settlements. During the late Neolithic, two partly antithetic ideas are
discussed: On one hand Shifting Cultivation assumes frequently shifted
crop fields and the use of fire to provide nitrogen for plant uptake; On
the other hand Permanent Cultivation reconstructs longer-ranging use of
the fields, to which nitrogen may have been provided by various means.
From the Bronze Age onwards, most probably some form of extensive ard
cultivation was applied. In this article, we explore the implications of
the different hypotheses for the socio-ecological system of the wetland
sites. We combine the capability of agent-based modelling to simulate
dynamic processes with the benefits provided by geographical information
systems and the possibilities provided by the use of modern
agro-ecosystem modelling tools. First, we used a mechanistic crop growth
model, MONICA, to evaluate the influence of important factors of
prehistoric crop yield formation: the climatic conditions, the soil
texture and the degree of nitrogen availability. Second, we applied an
agent-based model (WELASSIMO\_crops) to simulate the spatial and
economic implications related to the different crop husbandry methods.
Our results provide quantitative information on the extent of crop
husbandry activities in the wetland sites and on the effect of natural
and anthropogenic factors on prehistoric crop yields. Without manure
application, initial average yields of 1.0 t ha(-1) a(-1) are shown to
decrease rapidly to only 50 \% after 10 years. A manuring rate of 10 t
ha(-1) a(-1) allows for higher yields of 1.7 t ha(-1) a(-1) and a slower
rate of fertility decrease, but requires high numbers of livestock per
capita. In shifting cultivation, high yields of 2.7 t ha(-1) a(-1) are
reasonable, while necessitating a very large area and high labour input.
Using the model results and a case study, we argue that permanent
cultivation is more likely to have been the standard method, while
burning of the landscape may have had different objectives than crop
husbandry. We find that the combination of agent-based social and
process-based biophysical modelling is a powerful tool to study the
complex interdependencies in human-environment systems in the past.
Tags
Dynamics
Land-use
Human impact
shifting cultivation
Germany
Central-europe
Reconstruction
Lake constance
Plant economy
Bc