TY - JOUR
T1 - Early Islamic Groundwater-Harvesting Plot-and-Berm Agroecosystems Along the Southeastern Mediterranean Coast
T2 - The Earliest Known Agriculture in Sand
AU - Taxel, Itamar
AU - Roskin, Joel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Association for Environmental Archaeology 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This article discusses the archaeological, geoarchaeogical and chronological finds of our 2020–2022 fieldwork south of Caesarea, along with several archaeological and geomorphological surveys of altogether three innovative agroecosystems in the coastal sand bodies of the southeastern Mediterranean coast in Israel. The finds are hypothesised to be the first of its kind and the first major attempt to cultivate inert aeolian sand. These Early Islamic Plot-and-Berm agroecosystems perhaps heralded similar types of later traditional groundwater harvesting agrotechnologies in aeolian sand that existed along the southeastern Mediterranean coast, in Saharan Algeria, Iran and in the Atlantic coast of Iberia. The finds, combined with ongoing physical studies of the agroecosystems and their traditional analogues are anticipated to yield better understanding of the function of the agroecosystems that in turn, will provide new insights on a variety of research subjects stimulated by the database accumulated during and after our fieldwork.
AB - This article discusses the archaeological, geoarchaeogical and chronological finds of our 2020–2022 fieldwork south of Caesarea, along with several archaeological and geomorphological surveys of altogether three innovative agroecosystems in the coastal sand bodies of the southeastern Mediterranean coast in Israel. The finds are hypothesised to be the first of its kind and the first major attempt to cultivate inert aeolian sand. These Early Islamic Plot-and-Berm agroecosystems perhaps heralded similar types of later traditional groundwater harvesting agrotechnologies in aeolian sand that existed along the southeastern Mediterranean coast, in Saharan Algeria, Iran and in the Atlantic coast of Iberia. The finds, combined with ongoing physical studies of the agroecosystems and their traditional analogues are anticipated to yield better understanding of the function of the agroecosystems that in turn, will provide new insights on a variety of research subjects stimulated by the database accumulated during and after our fieldwork.
KW - Early Islamic period
KW - Plot-and-Berm agroecosystems
KW - Southeastern Mediterranean
KW - agricultural innovation
KW - groundwater harvesting
KW - sand agriculture
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85215308383&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14614103.2025.2452090
DO - 10.1080/14614103.2025.2452090
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:85215308383
SN - 1461-4103
JO - Environmental Archaeology
JF - Environmental Archaeology
ER -