4.5 Article

Geometric morphometrics sheds new light on the identification and domestication status of ?new glume wheat? at Neolithic ?atalho?y?k

Journal

JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 142, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2022.105599

Keywords

Geometric morphometrics; atalhoy?k; Domestication; Wheat; Neolithic; Anatolia

Funding

  1. Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Open-Oxford-Cambridge Doctoral Training Partnership (OOCDTP)
  2. Merton College, Oxford

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The study shows that 'New glume wheat' (NGW), a type of wheat found at Neolithic-Bronze Age sites, is closely comparable to modern wheats from the Triticum timopheevii group. The analysis also suggests that NGW was undergoing selection for domestication traits during the East Mound sequence. These findings provide insights into the taxonomic classification and domestication status of NGW and highlight the importance of a broad-spectrum plant strategy at the site.
'New glume wheat' (NGW) is an archaeobotanical type increasingly recognised at Neolithic-Bronze Age sites across Europe and Western Asia. NGW has been recognised via aDNA and morphological analyses of chaff re-mains as a member of the Triticum timopheevii wheat group, recent cultivation of which is known only from western Georgia. This study combines geometric morphometric (GMM) analysis of NGW grains with updated results from a parallel study of chaff dehiscence, to assess the taxonomic classification and domestication status of NGW from the Neolithic East Mound at Catalho spacing diaeresis yuk (central Anatolia). Results confirm close comparability of NGW with modern wheats from the group T. timopheevii, in a form which has remained remarkably similar over thousands of years. Furthermore, the analysis suggests that NGW was undergoing selection for domestication traits in terms of shattering behaviour and grain form during the 1150-year East Mound sequence. These findings are interpreted in the context of substantial archaeobotanical evidence for a broad-spectrum plant strategy at Catalho spacing diaeresis yuk which mitigated the risk of resource failure and supported experimentation in cropping. Possible cultural and practical incentives are considered for investment in the crop, made despite the availability of a fully-domesticated glume wheat (emmer) with similar growing and processing requirements. Alongside this, the study demonstrates the sensitivity of GMM to differences between and within wheat species, with methodological findings that can inform future studies.

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