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Featured researches published by Philippe Rentzel.


The Holocene | 2016

On-site data cast doubts on the hypothesis of shifting cultivation in the late Neolithic (c. 4300–2400 cal. BC): Landscape management as an alternative paradigm:

Stefanie Jacomet; Renate Ebersbach; Örni Akeret; Ferran Antolín; Tilman Baum; Amy Bogaard; Christoph Brombacher; Niels K Bleicher; Annekäthi Heitz-Weniger; Heide Hüster-Plogmann; Eda Gross; Marlu Kühn; Philippe Rentzel; Bigna L. Steiner; Lucia Wick; Jörg Schibler

This article brings together in a comprehensive way, and for the first time, on- and off-site palaeoenvironmental data from the area of the Central European lake dwellings (a UNESCO World Cultural Heritage Site since 2011). The types of data considered are as follows: high-resolution off-site pollen cores, including micro-charcoal counts, and on-site data, including botanical macro- and micro-remains, hand-collected animal bones, remains of microfauna, and data on woodland management (dendrotypology). The period considered is the late Neolithic (c. 4300–2400 cal. BC). For this period, especially for its earlier phases, discussions of land-use patterns are contradictory. Based on off-site data, slash-and-burn – as known from tropical regions – is thought to be the only possible way to cultivate the land. On-site data however show a completely different picture: all indications point to the permanent cultivation of cereals (Triticum spp., Hordeum vulgare), pea (Pisum sativum), flax (Linum usitatissimum) and opium-poppy (Papaver somniferum). Cycles of landscape use are traceable, including coppicing and moving around the landscape with animal herds. Archaeobiological studies further indicate also that hunting and gathering were an important component and that the landscape was manipulated accordingly. Late Neolithic land-use systems also included the use of fire as a tool for opening up the landscape. Here we argue that bringing together all the types of palaeoenvironmental proxies in an integrative way allows us to draw a more comprehensive and reliable picture of the land-use systems in the late Neolithic than had been reconstructed previously largely on the basis of off-site data.


Journal of Wetland Archaeology | 2012

Zurich-Alpenquai : a multidisciplinary approach to the chronological development of a Late Bronze Age lakeside settlement in the northern Circum-Alpine Region

Philipp Wiemann; Marlu Kühn; Annekäthi Heitz-Weniger; Barbara Stopp; Benjamin Jennings; Philippe Rentzel; Francesco Menotti

Abstract The Alpenquai lake-dwelling is located on Lake Zurich, and can be considered as one of the rare Late Bronze Age lake-dwellings with a pronounced organic-rich cultural layer in the northern Circum-Alpine region. Within a larger research project, investigating the final abandonment of the lakeshores in the Circum-Alpine area at the end of the Late Bronze Age, this settlement has been investigated using a multidisciplinary research design. Combining micromorphology, archaeobotany, palynology, archaeozoology and material culture studies, the formation of the site is reconstructed, and the reasons for its final abandonment are sought. A highly dynamic lake system that caused a lake water level rise before 900 BC, a regression in the second half of the 9th century BC, and a later transgression, could be detected. The settlement appears to have been established during the lake regression, and abandoned during the transgression, proving a high degree of environmental adaptation by its inhabitants.


Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2007

Long-term site formation processes at the natural springs Nadaouiyeh and Hummal in the El Kowm oasis, Central Syria

Jean-Marie Le Tensorer; Reto Jagher; Philippe Rentzel; Thomas Hauck; Kristin Ismail-Meyer; Christine Pümpin; Dorota Wojtczak


Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2001

Micromorphology and plant macrofossil analysis of cattle dung from the Neolithic lake shore settlement of Arbon Bleiche 3

Örni Akeret; Philippe Rentzel


Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2013

Neolithic Lakeshore Settlements in Switzerland: New Insights on Site Formation Processes from Micromorphology

Kristin Ismail-Meyer; Philippe Rentzel; Philipp Wiemann


Swiss Journal of Geosciences | 2009

Formation and evolution of the Lower Terrace of the Rhine River in the area of Basel

Stéphane Kock; Peter Huggenberger; Frank Preusser; Philippe Rentzel; Andreas Wetzel


Paleobiology | 1997

Découvertes de restes humains dans les niveaux acheuléens de Nadaouiyeh Aïn Askar (El Kowm, Syrie Centrale).

Reto Jagher; Jean-Marie Le Tensorer; Philippe Morel; Sultan Muhesen; Josette Renault-Miskovsky; Philippe Rentzel; Peter Schmid


Geoarchaeology-an International Journal | 2004

Effects of bears on rockshelter sediments at Tanay Sur-les-Creux, southwestern Switzerland

Luc Braillard; Michel Guélat; Philippe Rentzel


Swiss Journal of Geosciences | 2009

Loess and palaeosols on the High Terrace at Sierentz (France), and implications for the chronology of terrace formation in the Upper Rhine Graben

Philippe Rentzel; Frank Preusser; Christine Pümpin; Jean-Jacques Wolf


Archive | 2017

Trampling, Poaching and the Effect of Traffic

Philippe Rentzel; Cristiano Nicosia; Anne Gebhardt; David Brönnimann; Christine Pümpin; Kristin Ismail-Meyer

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