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    Quantifying surplus and sustainability in the archaeological record at the carthaginian-roman urban mound of zita, tripolitania

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    Author
    Kaufman, B.
    Barnard, H.
    Drine, A.
    Khedher, R.
    Farahani, A.
    Tahar, S.B.
    Jerray, E.
    Damiata, B.N.
    Daniels, M.
    Cerezo-Román, J.
    Fenn, T.
    Moses, V.
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    Affiliation
    School of Anthropology, University of Arizona
    Issue Date
    2021
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher
    University of Chicago Press
    Citation
    Kaufman, B., Barnard, H., Drine, A., Khedher, R., Farahani, A., Tahar, S. B., Jerray, E., Damiata, B. N., Daniels, M., Cerezo-Román, J., Fenn, T., & Moses, V. (2021). Quantifying surplus and sustainability in the archaeological record at the carthaginian-roman urban mound of zita, tripolitania. Current Anthropology.
    Journal
    Current Anthropology
    Rights
    Copyright © 2021 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved.
    Collection Information
    This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Abstract
    Cultural ecological theory is applied to a spatially and temporally bounded archaeological data set to document long-term paleoeco-logical processes and associated sociopolitical behaviors. Volumetric excavations, treating the material culture of an archaeological matrix similar to an ecological core, can yield quantifiable frequencies of surplus goods that provide a multiproxy empirical lens into incremental changes in land use practices, natural resource consumption, and, in this case, likely overexploitation. Archaeological methods are employed to quantify cultural ecological processes of natural resource exploitation, industrial intensification, sustainability and scarcity, and settlement collapse during the colonial transition between Carthaginian and Roman North Africa. The data indicate that overexploitation of olive timber for metallurgical fuel taxed the ecological metabolism of the Zita resource base, likely contributing to a collapse of the entire local economic system. © 2021 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved.
    Note
    12 month embargo; published online 20 July 2021
    ISSN
    0011-3204
    DOI
    10.1086/715275
    Version
    Final published version
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1086/715275
    Scopus Count
    Collections
    UA Faculty Publications

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