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A hypothetical answer to the decline of the Granary of Rome?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

L. Chatterton
Affiliation:
Lyndoch, South Australia

Abstract

In an earlier paper, we argued that medic pasture was probably an important component of the ancient farming regime in Libya. The success of modern experiments which have reintroduced medicago pasture was also described.

In this paper, the analysis is taken further and the results of different types of crop rotation are compared. The Waite experiment in Australia has shown that the most intensive systems of cereal cultivation are not necessarily the most productive, when soil exhaustion and long term decline in yields are taken into account. In fact, the highest profits and best returns of both cereals and livestock are obtained from low intensity systems.

It is possible that increased emphasis on cereal production in the Roman period may have led to a diminuation of the medic pasture, to the exhaustion of the soils and falling yields. By its own initial success, Romano-Libyan agriculture may have contributed to its own decline.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 1985

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References

Chatterton, B. A. 1979. Report on rainfed cereal and livestock production in West Asia and North Africa. South Australian Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Adelaide.Google Scholar
Chatterton, B. A. and L., 1984. Medicago – Its possible role in Romano-Libyan dryfarming and its positive role in modern dryfarming. Libyan Studies 15: 157160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton, R. S. and Britza, D. K. 1984. Permanent rotation experiment CI. Waite Agricultural Research Institute Biennial Report 1982–1983: 221227.Google Scholar
Prance, T. 1979. An Economic Comparison of the Australian and Traditional Farming Methods. Published as an appendix to Chatterton 1979.Google Scholar