Regional population collapse followed initial agriculture booms in mid-Holocene Europe
University College London · University of Maryland, College Park
Abstract
Following its initial arrival in SE Europe 8,500 years ago agriculture spread throughout the continent, changing food production and consumption patterns and increasing population densities. Here we show that, in contrast to the steady population growth usually assumed, the introduction of agriculture into Europe was followed by a boom-and-bust pattern in the density of regional populations. We demonstrate that summed calibrated radiocarbon date distributions and simulation can be used to test the significance of these demographic booms and busts in the context of uncertainty in the radiocarbon date calibration curve and archaeological sampling. We report these results for Central and Northwest Europe between…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 75.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Radiocarbon dating
- Bust
- Context (archaeology)
- Population
- Holocene
- Boom
- Agriculture
- Geography
- Zero hunger