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Dive into the research topics where Marco Pacciarelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Pacciarelli.


The Holocene | 2017

Evidence of a short-lived episode of olive (Olea europaea L.) cultivation during the Early Bronze Age in western Mediterranean (southern Italy)

Alessia D’Auria; Mauro Paolo Buonincontri; Emilia Allevato; Antonio Saracino; Reinhard Jung; Marco Pacciarelli; Gaetano Di Pasquale

Anthracological analysis was carried out in the archaeological site of Punta di Zambrone on the Tyrrhenian coast of Calabria in southern Italy. Archaeological excavation documented at the site settlement deposits dated mainly to Early Bronze Age (EBA, 21st–18th century BC) and the Recent Bronze Age (RBA, 13th to early 12th century BC). In the phase of the EBA village, the high frequency of Olea europaea in the charcoal data suggests the tree may well have been cultivated by favouring the spread of the scant olive trees growing wild. Comparison with existing archaeobotanical data indicates that olive cultivation spread over a large portion of southern Italy from the EBA and the early Middle Bronze Age (MBA, 17th–15th century BC), thus calling into question the hypothesis of its first cultivation related to the interaction between Mycenaean Greece and local cultures in southern Italy. The early domestication event at Punta di Zambrone supports the idea of multiple independent primary events of olive domestication throughout the Mediterranean basin. In the following phase of the fortified settlement dated to the RBA, the frequency of olive charcoal diminished and the expansion of a more or less dense forest dominated by Quercus was judged to be a consequence of human depopulation that characterises the end of MBA and also a different land use of RBA. This forest increase, also recorded by other archaeobotanical proxies in the central and southern Italian peninsula, is found to be related to the diffusion in southern Calabria of the Subapennine culture, spreading from more northerly areas of Italy and bringing different economic systems and agronomic knowledge. These far-reaching changes appear to have brought to a halt the first event of olive cultivation recorded at Punta di Zambrone.


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2018

How much is known about glassy materials in Bronze and Iron Age Italy? New data and general overview

Sonia Conte; Ilaria Matarese; Giovanna Vezzalini; Marco Pacciarelli; Teodoro Scarano; A. Vanzetti; Bernard Gratuze; Rossella Arletti

Knowledge of glass trading in protohistoric Southern Italy has been limited by a lack of archeometrical data available to date, preventing comparison with the well-known Northern Italian context. The aim of the present work is to help fill the data gap for Southern Bronze-Iron Age vitreous items and enable a general overview of protohistoric Italian glass supply routes. The paper presents physical-chemical data for 61 vitreous items from 11 Southern Italian sites, dated from the beginning of the Bronze Age up to the Archaic period (22nd–6th century BC), ensuring a complete diachronic analysis. SEM-EDS, EMPA, LA-ICPMS, and XRD analyses permitted definition of the raw materials and manufacturing techniques employed, as well as determination of item provenance. The sample set exhibits great variability of glass chemical types, including plant ash glass, mixed alkali, and natron samples. A complex picture emerges, mostly as regards the different natron glass typologies (High-Zr, Low-Zr, Black, etc.) and their rapid technological evolution in the early 1st millennium BC. Taking into account the data reported in this study and those available in literature for both Northern and Southern Italian Bronze-Iron Ages items, this work demonstrates the existence of different trade routes for the first time. This is especially true for the Early/Middle Bronze Age periods, with Northern Italy involved in trade with Central Europe, and South already involved in Mediterranean trade circuits.


Journal of Vegetation Science | 2014

Late Holocene persistence of Abies alba in low-mid altitude deciduous forests of central and southern Italy: new perspectives from charcoal data

Gaetano Di Pasquale; Emilia Allevato; Anna Cocchiararo; Daniela Moser; Marco Pacciarelli; Antonio Saracino


European Journal of Mineralogy | 2015

Bronze Age vitreous materials from Punta di Zambrone (southern Italy)

Sonia Conte; Ilaria Matarese; Simona Quartieri; Rossella Arletti; Reinhard Jung; Marco Pacciarelli; Bernard Gratuze


Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports | 2015

From west to west: Determining production regions of Mycenaean pottery of Punta di Zambrone (Calabria, Italy)

Reinhard Jung; H. Mommsen; Marco Pacciarelli


Archaeologia Austriaca | 2015

Punta di Zambrone (Calabria) – a Bronze Age Harbour Site. First Preliminary Report on the Recent Bronze Age (2011– 2012 Campaigns)

Reinhard Jung; Marco Pacciarelli; Barbara Zach; Marlies Klee; Ursula Thanheiser


Preistoria del cibo - 50° Riunione Scientifica Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria | 2017

Il Sale: Record archeologico, produzione e manipolazione

Clarissa Belardelli; Luca Alessandri; Bianca Maria Aranguren; Peter Attema; Maria Rosaria Cinquegrana; Manuela Montagnari Kokelj; N Negroni Catacchio; Marco Pacciarelli


5th Cambridge Iron Age Conference | 2016

Salt and Protohistoric Society in Central Tyrrhenian Italy

Luca Alessandri; Bianca Maria Aranguren; Peter Attema; Maria Rosaria Cinquegrana; Marco Pacciarelli


Archaeologia Austriaca | 2015

Vaghi e pendenti litici dell’età del bronzo dalla Sicilia e dalle Eolie

Ilaria Matarese; Anita Crispino; Reinhard Jung; Maria Clara Martinelli; Paolo Pallante; Marco Pacciarelli


XXXIX Riunione Scientifica Istituto Italiano Preistoria Protostoria | 2006

Organizzazione della produzione e modalità di scambio dal Neolitico al Bronzo finale

M Bernabò Brea; Albanese Procelli R. M; Maxence Bailly; Paolo Bellintani; Marco Bettelli; Paola Bianchi; A De Santis; Alessandra R. Giumlia-Mair; Sara Tiziana Levi; F Lo Schiavo; R. Maggi; Martinelli M. C; Marco Pacciarelli; Pierre Pétrequin; A. Schiappelli

Collaboration


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Reinhard Jung

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Ilaria Matarese

University of Naples Federico II

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Antonio Saracino

University of Naples Federico II

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Emilia Allevato

University of Naples Federico II

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Gaetano Di Pasquale

University of Naples Federico II

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Sara Tiziana Levi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Sonia Conte

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Maxence Bailly

University of Franche-Comté

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