Abstract

The present study concerns the Phoenician-Punic site of Motya, a small island set in Western Sicily (Italy), in the Marsala Lagoon (Stagnone di Marsala), between Trapani and Marsala. A big disposal pit, datable to between the first half of the 8th and the mid-6th century bc, was identified in Area D. This context was sampled for plant macro-remains through bucket flotation. Palynological treatment and analysis were also performed on soil samples collected from each of the identified filling layers. The combination of the study of macro- and micro-remains has shown to be effective in answering questions concerning introduced food plants and agricultural practices, and native plants, including timber use. Here we investigate if a waste context can provide information about Phoenicians at Motya and their impact on the local plant communities. We found that human diet included cereals (mostly naked wheat), pulses and fruits. A focus was placed on weeds (including Lolium temulentum and Phalaris spp.) referable to different stages of crop processing. This aspect was enriched by the finding of cereal pollen, which suggests that threshing (if not even cultivation) was carried out on site. Palynology also indicates an open environment, with little to no forest cover, characterized by complex anthropogenic activities. Anthracology suggests the presence of typical Mediterranean plant taxa, including not only the shrubs Pistacia lentiscus and Erica multiflora, but also evergreen oaks. The presence of a stone pine nut and of Pinus pinea/pinaster in the pollen rain is noteworthy, suggesting the local occurrence of these Mediterranean pines outside their native distribution range. This represents the first such find in the central Mediterranean. Finally, the present study allows us to compare Motya’s past environment with the present one. The disappearance of Juniperus sp. and Erica arborea from the present-day surroundings of the Marsala lagoon appears to be related to land-overexploitation, aridification or a combination of both processes.

Highlights

  • “Phoenicians” is the label given by Greeks to a multifaceted culture of the coast of the Levant, which spread across the Mediterranean between the second and the first millennium bc bringing a new socio-economic model – that of the port-city – and a revolutionary cultural tool: the alphabet

  • Epigraphy and written sources have provided a large set of data on the Phoenicians in the Western Mediterranean, archaeology is enlarging our knowledge on their materiality and daily life in Phoenician centres

  • Knowledge regarding their use of plants and on the important impact they had on the ancient environment is limited to studies on Phoenician plant fossils restricted to Sardinia, Italy

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Summary

Introduction

“Phoenicians” is the label given by Greeks to a multifaceted culture of the coast of the Levant, which spread across the Mediterranean between the second and the first millennium bc bringing a new socio-economic model – that of the port-city – and a revolutionary cultural tool: the alphabet. Buosi et al 2017; Ucchesu et al 2017; Sabato et al 2019), Southern Iberia (e.g. Buxò 2008), Tunisia (van Zeist et al 2001), Morocco (Grau Almero 2011) and Lebanon (Badura et al 2016; Orendi and Deckers 2018) Such studies focus on macro-remains, with pollen sometimes being introduced as a complementary tool The “Missione Archeologica a Mozia” of Sapienza University is responsible for excavations on the island since 1964, under the lead of Lorenzo Nigro starting from 2002

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