Abstract

Pollen and non-pollen palynomorph analyses conducted on archaeological sediments from ditches and pits are used to investigate land-use and vegetation history around the long-lived rural settlement of Beaurieux Les Greves in the Aisne valley, Picardy, northern France. Samples were examined from successive phases spanning the 8th century bc to the 3rd century ad. Each phase showed evidence of agriculture and human impact on the environment. The earliest occupation was during the early Iron Age, and the area around the site was shown to have been almost completely deforested and mainly pasture. The later Iron Age supported mixed agriculture, probably with pasture around the settlement site and cereal fields further away. In Gallo-Roman times there was mixed farming with considerable cereal cultivation, although the area near the site was mainly pasture or abandoned land. Late Gallo-Roman times saw a reduction in agricultural activity and some regeneration of heath and scrub vegetation. Coprophilous fungal spores are conspicuous and indicate the importance of animal husbandry on and around the site. The data from Beaurieux Les Greves augment earlier analyses from settlements and natural deposits in the Aisne valley in suggesting almost complete deforestation for agricultural land use within the valley bottom, although some woodland undoubtedly survived on the steeper valley sides and nearby plateaux. It agrees with the pollen evidence from the wider region of north-eastern France that shows clearance of Fagus-dominated woodland for mixed agriculture in late Iron Age and Gallo-Roman times, and increasingly for arable cultivation. This was responsible for effecting a transformation from a partly wooded to a mainly open landscape.

Highlights

  • The valley of the river Aisne, in southern Picardy, is rich in important archaeological sites of different periods, and its gravel terraces and floodplain are today one of the most intensively studied archaeological landscapes in Europe (e.g. Auxiette and Malrain 2005; Bostyn and Hachem 2015)

  • The pollen data indicate open land, probably grazed, at and around the settlement from the early Iron Age onwards, but with periods when agriculture was reduced in intensity locally or even abandoned altogether

  • Evidence of both arable cultivation and animal husbandry are recorded in the land-use record from the site. This agrees with the pollen record from natural sediment profiles in the Aisne valley and regionally, these show that there was a significant amount of woodland, mainly beech, oak and alder, remaining away from settlement locations, fields and pastures

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Summary

Introduction

The valley of the river Aisne, in southern Picardy, is rich in important archaeological sites of different periods, and its gravel terraces and floodplain are today one of the most intensively studied archaeological landscapes in Europe (e.g. Auxiette and Malrain 2005; Bostyn and Hachem 2015). Pion 1990; Gransar et al 1999; Haselgrove 2007a; Paris 2016), and notable amongst the late Iron Age sites of northern France are the large fortified ‘oppida’ on the alluvial terraces of the Aisne, such as Villeneuve-Saint-Germain (Ruby and Auxiette 2010; Auxiette and Paris 2017). There was extensive Iron Age and Gallo-Roman rural settlement in the valley, as well as on the adjacent slopes and plateaux (Pion et al 1996; Duvett 2017). This paper presents the results of pollen and non-pollen palynomorph analyses conducted on archaeological samples taken from ditches and pits during excavations at Beaurieux Les Grèves, one of a number of sites investigated in the Aisne department as part of a long-term project by Durham University during the 1980s and 90s exploring Iron Age and Gallo-Roman settlement patterns. The data are used to explore changing land use and vegetation history around the site over a thousand years from the earlier 1st millennium BC to the mid-1st millennium AD

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