There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.

Multiple arguments for or against the presence of 'urban' settlements in the Early Bronze Age of the southern Levant have identified the need to compare these settlements against their rural hinterlands through multiple lines of evidence. This meta-analysis of zooarchaeological data from t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jane S Gaastra, Tina L Greenfield, Haskel J Greenfield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227255
id doaj-6ffad55e0a7b429aabb0d5108a08e183
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6ffad55e0a7b429aabb0d5108a08e1832021-03-03T21:33:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01153e022725510.1371/journal.pone.0227255There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.Jane S GaastraTina L GreenfieldHaskel J GreenfieldMultiple arguments for or against the presence of 'urban' settlements in the Early Bronze Age of the southern Levant have identified the need to compare these settlements against their rural hinterlands through multiple lines of evidence. This meta-analysis of zooarchaeological data from the region compares and identifies patterns of animal production, provisioning and consumption between the supposed "urban" and rural sites of the southern Levant from the Early Bronze (EB) against the (more widely recognised urban) Middle Bronze (MB) Ages. It also identifies distinct and regionally specific patterns in animal production and consumption that can be detected between urban and rural sites of the southern Levant. The taxonomic and age profiles from EB Ia and Ib sites do not demonstrate any urban versus rural differentiation patterning, even though fortifications appear in the EB Ib. Beginning in the EB II and clearly visible in the EB III, there is differentiation between rural and urban sites in the taxonomic and age proportions. Differentiation is repeated in the MB II. The clear differentiation between "urban" and rural zooarchaeological assemblages from the EB II-III and MB suggest that rural sites are provisioning the larger fortified settlements. This pattern indicates that these sites are indeed urban in nature, and these societies are organized at the state-level. From the EB II onwards, there is a clear bias in the large centres towards the consumption of cattle and of subadult sheep and goats with a corresponding bias in smaller rural sites towards the consumption of adult sheep and goats and a reduced presence of cattle. After the emergence of this differential pattern, it disappears with the decline in social complexity at the end of the Early Bronze Age, only to come 'back again' with the re-emergence of urban settlement systems in the Middle Bronze Age.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227255
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jane S Gaastra
Tina L Greenfield
Haskel J Greenfield
spellingShingle Jane S Gaastra
Tina L Greenfield
Haskel J Greenfield
There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jane S Gaastra
Tina L Greenfield
Haskel J Greenfield
author_sort Jane S Gaastra
title There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
title_short There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
title_full There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
title_fullStr There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
title_full_unstemmed There and back again: A zooarchaeological perspective on Early and Middle Bronze Age urbanism in the southern Levant.
title_sort there and back again: a zooarchaeological perspective on early and middle bronze age urbanism in the southern levant.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Multiple arguments for or against the presence of 'urban' settlements in the Early Bronze Age of the southern Levant have identified the need to compare these settlements against their rural hinterlands through multiple lines of evidence. This meta-analysis of zooarchaeological data from the region compares and identifies patterns of animal production, provisioning and consumption between the supposed "urban" and rural sites of the southern Levant from the Early Bronze (EB) against the (more widely recognised urban) Middle Bronze (MB) Ages. It also identifies distinct and regionally specific patterns in animal production and consumption that can be detected between urban and rural sites of the southern Levant. The taxonomic and age profiles from EB Ia and Ib sites do not demonstrate any urban versus rural differentiation patterning, even though fortifications appear in the EB Ib. Beginning in the EB II and clearly visible in the EB III, there is differentiation between rural and urban sites in the taxonomic and age proportions. Differentiation is repeated in the MB II. The clear differentiation between "urban" and rural zooarchaeological assemblages from the EB II-III and MB suggest that rural sites are provisioning the larger fortified settlements. This pattern indicates that these sites are indeed urban in nature, and these societies are organized at the state-level. From the EB II onwards, there is a clear bias in the large centres towards the consumption of cattle and of subadult sheep and goats with a corresponding bias in smaller rural sites towards the consumption of adult sheep and goats and a reduced presence of cattle. After the emergence of this differential pattern, it disappears with the decline in social complexity at the end of the Early Bronze Age, only to come 'back again' with the re-emergence of urban settlement systems in the Middle Bronze Age.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227255
work_keys_str_mv AT janesgaastra thereandbackagainazooarchaeologicalperspectiveonearlyandmiddlebronzeageurbanisminthesouthernlevant
AT tinalgreenfield thereandbackagainazooarchaeologicalperspectiveonearlyandmiddlebronzeageurbanisminthesouthernlevant
AT haskeljgreenfield thereandbackagainazooarchaeologicalperspectiveonearlyandmiddlebronzeageurbanisminthesouthernlevant
_version_ 1714816261354946560