Productivity of pre-modern agriculture in the Cucuteni-Trypillia area
A. Shukurov, M. Yu. Videiko, G. R. Sarson, K. Davison, R. Shiel, P. M., Dolukhanov, G. A. Pashkevich

TL;DR
This study reconstructs pre-modern Cucuteni-Trypillia agriculture, analyzing diet, yields, labor, and settlement sizes, highlighting the role of dairy, technological innovations, and social organization in supporting various community sizes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive palaeoeconomy model for Cucuteni-Trypillia agriculture, integrating diet, yield estimates, labor costs, and settlement analysis with new insights into technological impacts.
Findings
Small communities supported by cereal and animal products.
Dairy significantly contributed to diet and labor balance.
Large settlements required satellite villages and trade networks.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present palaeoeconomy reconstructions for pre-modern agriculture, with the Cucuteni-Trypillia Cultural unity (5,400-2,700 BC, modern Ukraine, Moldova and Romania) as example. The starting point of our analysis is the palaeodiet structure suggested by archaeological data, stable isotope analyses of human remains, and palynology. We allow for the archeologically attested contributions of domesticated and wild animal products to the diet, develop plausible estimates of the yield of ancient cereal varieties cultivated with ancient techniques, and quantify the yield dependence on the time after initial planting and on rainfall (as a climate proxy). Our conclusions involve analysis of the labour costs of the agricultural cycle of both an individual and a farmer's family. Finally, we put our results into the context of the exploitation territory and catchment analysis. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAncient and Medieval Archaeology Studies
