Postantique Soils as a Source of Land Use Information: A Case Studyof anAncientGreekAgriculturalAreaon theNorthernBlack

semanticscholar(2020)

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Abstract
As an effect of intensive agricultural development of the steppes of the northern Black Sea coast, the finds of postantique agricultural landscapes that preserve relic elements of ancient land-use infrastructure are extremely rare. To these belongs the uniquely preserved ancient Greek land division system on the Tarkhankut Peninsula (north-western Crimea), which was studied using the methods of soil science and biomorphic analysis. 'is paper explores ancient land-use practices in order to reconstruct the original parameters of the land division system, as well as agricultural techniques employed. For postantique agricultural landscapes, an integrated geoarchaeological approach that includes GIS and remote sensing methodologies, in-field study of microrelief and soil registrograms, pedochronological dating technique, and physicochemical, geochemical, and biomorphic soil analyses has been developed and tested.'e soil-geomorphological reconstruction shows that the Hellenistic land division system included a 4.5–4.9m wide strip of land bordered by a 4.1–4.7m wide (at the base) and c. 0.2m high wall and a c. 2m wide and over 15 cm deep trench, which controlled surface runoff and erosion. Ancient agricultural practices of slope farming resembled the modern ones. Surface runoff and soil erosion were controlled by dividing the catchment area into narrow plots, the borders of which on arable land were marked by simple earthen structures (low walls with shallow trenches). 'e biomorphic analysis of soil sampled atop these structures indicates that in ancient times, these earthen walls were not cultivated. 'e study of conservative properties preserved in pedomemory of postagrogenic soils provided valuable evidence of agricultural techniques used in the palaeogeographic conditions of the 4 and 3 centuries BC.
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