Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T11:25:55.773Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Iron Age Agriculture − A Critical Rejoinder to “Settlement Oscillations in the Negev Highlands Revisited: the Impact of Microarchaeological Methods”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2017

Hendrik J Bruins*
Affiliation:
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Bona Terra Department ‘Man in the Desert’, Sede Boker Campus 84990, Israel
Johannes van der Plicht
Affiliation:
University of Groningen, Centre for Isotope Research, Groningen, The Netherlands University of Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden, The Netherlands
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

Shahack-Gross and Finkelstein (2015) further developed their theory, based on microarchaeology, that there was no agriculture in the Negev Highlands during the Iron Age. We critically evaluate their article in this rejoinder and propose that their conclusion is an example of overinterpretation from a small amount of indirect data. Based on phytoliths in two courtyards and a few rooms, i.e. structures not related to farming, they construed the absence of agriculture during the Iron Age in an area of 2000 km2. We present new radiocarbon, macroarchaeological, and microarchaeological data of Horvat Haluqim, showing that agriculture in the Negev Highlands based on runoff/floodwater capture and related terrace wall construction did not begin with the Roman–Byzantine period. Terrace agriculture in the Negev is older and includes also the Iron Age.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
© 2017 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Albert, RM, Weiner, S. 2001. Study of phytoliths in prehistoric ash layers using a quantitative approach. In: Meunier JD, Coline F, editors. Phytoliths, Applications in Earth Science and Human History. Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema. p 251266.Google Scholar
Avner, U. 1998. Settlement, agriculture, and paleoclimate in ‘Uvda valley, Southern Negev desert, 6th-3rd millennia B.C. In: Issar A, Brown N, editors. Water, Environment and Society in Times of Climate Change. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic. p 147202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avni, G, Avni, Y, Porat, N. 2009. A new look at ancient agriculture in the Negev. Cathedra 133:1344. In Hebrew.Google Scholar
Avni, G, Porat, N, Avni, Y. 2013. Byzantine–Early Islamic agricultural systems in the Negev Highlands: Stages of development as interpreted through OSL dating. Journal of Field Archaeology 38(4):332346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avni, Y, Porat, N, Plakht, J, Avni, G. 2006. Geomorphologic changes leading to natural desertification processes versus anthropogenic land conservation in an arid environment, the Negev Highlands, Israel. Geomorphology 82:177200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avni, Y, Porat, N, Avni, G. 2012. Pre-farming environment and OSL chronology in the Negev Highlands, Israel. Journal of Arid Environments 86:1227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-David, J. 1982. Stages in the sedentarization of the Negev Bedouin, a transition from former semi-nomadic to settled population [unpublished PhD thesis]. Jerusalem: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 2001. Development of the radiocarbon calibration program OxCal. Radiocarbon 43(2A):355363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 2009. Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51(1):337360.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, HJ. 1986. Desert environment and agriculture in the Central Negev and Kadesh-Barnea during historical times [PhD dissertation]. Wageningen University: Nijkerk: Stichting Midbar Foundation.Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ. 1990. Ancient agricultural terraces at Nahal Mitnan. Atiqot 10:127128 (Hebrew), 22*–28* (English).Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ. 2007. Runoff terraces in the Negev Highlands during the Iron Age: nomads settling down or farmers living in the desert? In: Van der Steen EJ, Saidel BA, editors. On the Fringe of Society: Archaeological and Ethnoarchaeological Perspectives on Pastoral and Agricultural Societies, BAR International Series 1657. Oxford: Archaeopress. p 3743.Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ. 2012. Ancient desert agriculture in the Negev and climate-zone boundary changes during average, wet and drought years. Journal of Arid Environments 86:2842.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, HJ, Jongmans, A. 2012. Micromorphology of ancient agricultural terraces in the Negev Desert, Horvat Haluqim (Israel). In: Poch RM, Casamitjana M, Francis ML, editors. Proceedings of the 14th International Working Meeting on Soil Micromorphology. Lleida: University of Lleida & International Union of Soil Sciences. p 292295.Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ, Ore, G. 2009. Runoff from loess or bedrock? Hillslope geoarchaeology of ancient runoff farming systems at Horvat Haluqim and Har Eldad in the central Negev desert. Israel Journal of Earth Sciences 57(3–4):231247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, HJ, van der Plicht, J. 2005. Desert settlement through the Iron Age. In: Levy TE, Higham T, editors. The Bible and Radiocarbon Dating. London: Equinox. p 349366.Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ, van der Plicht, J. 2007. Radiocarbon dating the “Winderness of Zin”. Radiocarbon 49(2):481497.Google Scholar
Bruins, HJ, Evenari, M, Nessler, U. 1986. Rainwater harvesting agriculture for food production in arid zones: the challenge of the African famine. Applied Geography 6:1332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, HJ, van der Plicht, J, Haiman, M. 2012. Desert habitation history by 14C dating of soil layers in rural building structures (Negev, Israel): preliminary results from Horvat Haluqim. Radiocarbon 54(3–4):391406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canti, MG. 1998. The micromorphological identification of faecal spherulites from archaeological and modern materials. Journal of Archaeological Science 25:435444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, R. 1970. Atar Haroa. Atiqot 6:624. In: Hebrew.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1976. Excavations at Horvat Haluqim. Atiqot 11:3450.Google Scholar
Cohen, R, Cohen-Amin, R. 2004. Ancient Settlement of the Negev Highlands Volume II. The Iron Age and the Persian Periods. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority.Google Scholar
Darwin, C. 1846. An account of the fine dust which often falls on vessels in the Atlantic Ocean. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 2:2630.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eidt, RC. 1977. Detection and examination of anthrosols by phosphate analysis. Science 197(4311):13271333.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Evenari, M, Shanan, L, Tadmor, N. 1982. The Negev: The Challenge of a Desert, 2nd edition. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
FAO. 2006. Guidelines for Soil Description, 4th edition. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.Google Scholar
Fishkis, O, Ingwersen, J, Lamers, M, Denysenko, D, Streck, T. 2010. Phytolith transport in soil: a field study using fluorescent labelling. Geoderma 157:2736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaser, B, Balashov, E, Haumaier, L, Guggenberger, G, Zech, W. 2000. Black carbon in density fractions of anthropogenic soils of the Brazilian Amazon region. Organic Geochemistry 31:669678.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haiman, M. 1994. The Iron Age II sites of the western Negev highlands. Israel Exploration Journal 44:3661.Google Scholar
Kedar, Y. 1967. The Ancient Agriculture in the Negev Mountains. Jerusalem: Bialik Institute.Google Scholar
Lavee, H, Imeson, AC, Pariente, S, Benyamini, Y. 1991. The response of soils to simulated rainfall along a climatological gradient in an arid and semi-arid region. Catena Supplement 19:1937.Google Scholar
Lehmann, J, Pereira da Silva, J Jr, Steiner, C, Nehls, T, Zech, W, Glaser, B. 2003. Nutrient availability and leaching in an archaeological Anthrosol and a Ferralsol of the Central Amazon basin: fertilizer, manure and charcoal amendments. Plant and Soil 249:343357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leonardi, G, Miglavacca, M, Nardi, S. 1999. Soil phosphorus analysis as an integrative tool for recognizing buried ancient ploughsoils. Journal of Archaeological Science 26(4):343352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, NN. 1953. Lebanon - the mountain and its terraces. Geographical Review 43(1):114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayerson, P. 1960. The ancient agricultural remains of the central Negeb: methodology and dating criteria. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 160:2737.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, NF, Gleason, KL. 1997. The Archaeology of Garden and Field. Baltimore: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Munsell. 1998. Munsell Soil Color Charts, Revised Washable Edition. New Windsor: GretagMacbeth.Google Scholar
Ore, G, Bruins, HJ. 2012. Design features of ancient agricultural terrace walls in the Negev desert: human-made geodiversity. Land Degradation & Development 23:409418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Portillo, M, Albert, RM. 2011. Husbandry practices and livestock dung at the Numidian site of Althiburos (el Médéina, Kef Governorate, northern Tunisia): the phytolith and spherulite evidence. Journal of Archaeological Science 38(12):32243233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Beck, JW, Blackwell, PG, Bronk Ramsey, C, Buck, CE, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL, Friedrich, M, Grootes, PM, Guilderson, TP, Haflidason, H, Hajdas, I, Hatté, C, Heaton, TJ, Hoffmann, DL, Hogg, AG, Hughen, KA, Kaiser, KF, Kromer, B, Manning, SW, Niu, M, Reimer, RW, Richards, DA, Scott, EM, Southon, JR, Staff, RA, Turney, CSM, van der Plicht, J. 2013. IntCal13 and Marine13 radiocarbon age calibration curves 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55(4):18691887.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosen, S. 1997. Lithics after the Stone Age: A Handbook of Stone Tools from the Levant. Walnut Creek: Altamira Press.Google Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R, Boaretto, E, Cabanes, D, Katz, O, Finkelstein, I. 2014. Subsistence economy in the Negev Highlands: the Iron Age and the Byzantine/Early Islamic period. Levant 46(1):98117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R, Finkelstein, I. 2008. Subsistence practices in an arid environment: a geoarchaeological investigation in an Iron Age site, the Negev Highlands, Israel. Journal of Archaeological Science 35(4):965982.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shahack-Gross, R, Finkelstein, I. 2015. Settlement oscillations in the Negev Highlands revisited: the impact of microarchaeological methods. Radiocarbon 57(2):253264.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shanan, L, Schick, AP. 1980. A hydrological model for the Negev desert highlands: effects of infiltration, runoff and ancient agriculture. Hydrological Science Bulletin 25:269282.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shillito, LM. 2013. Grains of truth or transparent blindfolds? A review of current debates in archaeological phytolith analysis. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 22:7182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Asperen, HL, Bor, AMC, Sonneveld, MPW, Bruins, HJ, Lazarovitch, N. 2014. Properties of anthropogenic soils in ancient run-off capturing agricultural terraces in the Central Negev desert (Israel) and related effects of biochar and ash on crop growth. Plant and Soil 374:779792.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Breemen, N. 1986. Long-term chemical, mineralogical and morphological effects of iron-redox processes in periodically flooded soils. In: Stucki JW, Goodman BA, Schwertmann U, editors. Iron in Soils and Clay Minerals. Dordrecht: Reidel. p 811823.Google Scholar
van der Plicht, J, Bruins, HJ, Nijboer, AJ. 2009. The Iron Age around the Mediterranean: A high-chronology perspective from the Groningen radiocarbon database. Radiocarbon 51(1):213242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar