Expect the unexpected: the vital need for wild plants in a Bronze Age farmer’s diet


Submitted: 1 November 2015
Accepted: 26 January 2016
Published: 15 April 2016
Abstract Views: 1577
PDF: 1176
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Authors

Wild plant gathering and consumption has previously been described as being unimportant during the Bronze Age in the western Netherlands. It was believed that the people were full-time farmers and that the food produced on the settlement was enough for people to be self-sufficient. However, the analysis performed here to re-evaluate this statement has shown that wild plants were also essential to life in the Bronze Age. The combined information obtained from ethnography, ethnobotany, archaeology, ecology, nutritional studies, and physical anthropology has indeed indicated that wild plants, and especially their vegetative parts, would have had to have been gathered yearround in order for people to remain healthy.

Supporting Agencies

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), Corrie Bakels, Leiden University

van Amerongen, Y. (2016). Expect the unexpected: the vital need for wild plants in a Bronze Age farmer’s diet. Open Journal of Archaeometry, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.4081/arc.2016.6284

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