Meriel McClatchie
University College Dublin
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Meriel McClatchie.
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2015
Meriel McClatchie; Finbar McCormick; Thomas R. Kerr; Aidan O’Sullivan
Agriculture played an important role in the organisation of economy and society in early medieval Ireland (cal ad 400–1150). This paper examines archaeobotanical evidence for agricultural production and consumption, incorporating newly available data. Analysis of evidence from 60 sites revealed that hulled barley and oat were the dominant crops of this period. Naked wheat was present at many sites, but was not the primary crop in most cases. Rye was a minor crop in all locations where recorded. Other crops—including flax, pea and bean—were occasionally present. These crop choices provide a contrast with evidence from many other regions in contemporary Europe. In the case of Ireland, there is increased evidence for crops during the second half of the early medieval period, both in terms of the number of sites where remains were recovered and also the variety of crops cultivated; this may reflect a shift towards a greater emphasis on arable agriculture. The contribution of documentary sources and scientific analyses towards investigating food products is also highlighted in this study.
Antiquity | 2016
Meriel McClatchie; Amy Bogaard; Sue Colledge; Nicki J. Whitehouse; Rick Schulting; Philip Barratt; T. Rowan McLaughlin
Abstract Ireland has often been seen as marginal in the spread of the Neolithic and of early farming throughout Europe, in part due to the paucity of available data. By integrating and analysing a wealth of evidence from unpublished reports, a much more detailed picture of early arable agriculture has emerged. The improved chronological resolution reveals changing patterns in the exploitation of different plant species during the course of the Neolithic that belie simplistic notions of a steady intensification in farming, juxtaposed with a concomitant decline in foraging. It is possible that here, as in other areas of Europe, cereal cultivation became less important in the later Neolithic.
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014
Nicki J. Whitehouse; Rick Schulting; Meriel McClatchie; Phil Barratt; T. Rowan McLaughlin; Amy Bogaard; Sue Colledge; Rob Marchant; Joanne Gaffrey; M. Jane Bunting
Journal of Archaeological Science | 2014
Meriel McClatchie; Amy Bogaard; Sue Colledge; Nicki J. Whitehouse; Rick Schulting; Philip Barratt; T.R. McLaughlin
Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2014
Graeme Warren; Steve Davis; Meriel McClatchie; Rob Sands
Journal of World Prehistory | 2016
T. Rowan McLaughlin; Nicki J. Whitehouse; Rick Schulting; Meriel McClatchie; Philip Barratt; Amy Bogaard
Archaeology Ireland | 2010
Nicola Whitehouse; Meriel McClatchie; Philip Barratt; Rick Schulting; Amy Bogaard
Archive | 2009
Meriel McClatchie; Nicola Whitehouse; Rick Schulting; Amy Bogaard; Philip Barratt
In: Stevens, CJ and Nixon, S and Murray, MA and Fuller, DQ, (eds.) Archaeology of African Plant Use. (pp. 259-266). Left Coast Press (2013) | 2013
Meriel McClatchie; Dorian Q. Fuller
Doctoral thesis, UCL (University College London). | 2009
Meriel McClatchie