This is the blog of the project "Neo-Innova: The diffusion of Neolithic in the Central-Western Mediterranean: agriculture, technological innovations and radiocarbon dating" (HAR2016-75201-P). This research project focuses on one of the main turning points of human history: the diffusion of Neolithic. Even if it is well established that the Near East was the first focus of the invention of farming, around X-IX milenium BC, the mechanisms and the paths of its spreading in the rest of the Mediterranean are yet to be unfolded. During the last decades, the origin of European Neolithic has been explained as result of a diffusion process through two main axes: a Northern one, crossing central Europe, and a Southern one along the Mediterranean coasts. The current project is aimed to analyse the process of Neolithic diffusion through the Central-Western Mediterranean through analysis of the techniques and tools associated with the crop-harvesting and -processing tools. Analysis of those tools has to be supported by an extensive program of radiocarbon dating and a cross-analysis of the crop-harvesting/14C with the information proceeding from the environmental/ecological, the technological and the cereals consumed.

Wednesday 5 April 2017

New publication: Harvest time: crop-reaping technologies and the Neolithisation of the Central Mediterranean


We are pleased to present a new publication recently appeared in Antiquity.

Mazzucco, N., Guilbeau, D., Petrinelli-Pannocchia, C., Gassin, B., Ibáñez, J., & Gibaja, J. (2017). Harvest time: Crop-reaping technologies and the Neolithisation of the Central Mediterranean. Antiquity, 91(356). doi:10.15184/aqy.2016.273 


Thanks to all the authors and to the various funding institutions that are making this project possible (Fondation Fyssen, Maison de l'Archéologie et l'Ethnologie René-Ginouvès, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad)!