000057975 001__ 57975
000057975 005__ 20180211185623.0
000057975 0247_ $$2DOI$$a10.1007/s00334-005-0077-8
000057975 0247_ $$2WOS$$aWOS:000233726200004
000057975 037__ $$aPreJuSER-57975
000057975 041__ $$aeng
000057975 082__ $$a580
000057975 084__ $$2WoS$$aPlant Sciences
000057975 084__ $$2WoS$$aPaleontology
000057975 1001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129313$$aErnst, M.$$b0$$uFZJ
000057975 245__ $$aThe value of the archaeoboanical analysis of desiccated plant remains from old buildings: methodological aspects and interpretation of crop weed assemblages
000057975 260__ $$aBerlin$$bSpringer$$c2006
000057975 300__ $$a45 - 56
000057975 3367_ $$0PUB:(DE-HGF)16$$2PUB:(DE-HGF)$$aJournal Article
000057975 3367_ $$2DataCite$$aOutput Types/Journal article
000057975 3367_ $$00$$2EndNote$$aJournal Article
000057975 3367_ $$2BibTeX$$aARTICLE
000057975 3367_ $$2ORCID$$aJOURNAL_ARTICLE
000057975 3367_ $$2DRIVER$$aarticle
000057975 440_0 $$017583$$aVegetation History and Archaeobotany$$v15$$x0939-6314$$y1
000057975 500__ $$aRecord converted from VDB: 12.11.2012
000057975 520__ $$aPlant material like threshing remains has been used systematically as filling and insulation material in buildings for a long time. Such plant material can be found in several places, for example in floor cavities (internal floor deposits, Fehlboden) or in beam holes. For the first time in Switzerland, desiccated plant material like this has been investigated. In this article the analysis of the material from three different sites is presented, each dated to a different period, from the late medieval period to the time just before the industrial revolution. The samples consisted of chaff from Triticum spelta in bulk, and smaller amounts of other cereals such as T. monococcum, Avena sativa, Panicum miliaceum and Secale cereale, plus various weeds. The assemblages in the late medieval samples show evidence of three-field rotation: the high percentage of grassland species is interpreted as an indicator of the fallow land phase within the three-field system. A higher ratio of annual to perennial plants in the more modern samples indicates the development of more intensive tillage and cultivation. Methodological questions regarding sampling strategies of the floor cavity subsamples are investigated. The analyses suggest that the volume of these subsamples should be more than two litres.
000057975 536__ $$0G:(DE-Juel1)FUEK407$$2G:(DE-HGF)$$aTerrestrische Umwelt$$cP24$$x0
000057975 588__ $$aDataset connected to Web of Science
000057975 65320 $$2Author$$aSwitzerland
000057975 65320 $$2Author$$athree-field rotation
000057975 65320 $$2Author$$aArable weed communities
000057975 65320 $$2Author$$aearly modern period
000057975 65320 $$2Author$$alate medieval period
000057975 650_7 $$2WoSType$$aJ
000057975 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aJacomet, S.$$b1
000057975 773__ $$0PERI:(DE-600)1481434-1$$a10.1007/s00334-005-0077-8$$gVol. 15, p. 45 - 56$$p45 - 56$$q15<45 - 56$$tVegetation history and archaeobotany$$v15$$x0939-6314$$y2006
000057975 8567_ $$uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00334-005-0077-8
000057975 909CO $$ooai:juser.fz-juelich.de:57975$$pVDB
000057975 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0010$$aJCR/ISI refereed
000057975 9141_ $$y2006
000057975 9131_ $$0G:(DE-Juel1)FUEK407$$bErde und Umwelt$$kP24$$lTerrestrische Umwelt$$vTerrestrische Umwelt$$x0
000057975 9201_ $$0I:(DE-Juel1)VDB49$$d31.12.2006$$gICG$$kICG-III$$lPhytosphäre$$x1
000057975 970__ $$aVDB:(DE-Juel1)91131
000057975 980__ $$aVDB
000057975 980__ $$aConvertedRecord
000057975 980__ $$ajournal
000057975 980__ $$aI:(DE-Juel1)IBG-2-20101118
000057975 980__ $$aUNRESTRICTED
000057975 981__ $$aI:(DE-Juel1)IBG-2-20101118
000057975 981__ $$aI:(DE-Juel1)ICG-3-20090406